The Arizona Republic is an American daily newspaper published in Phoenix. Circulated throughout Arizona, it is the state's largest newspaper, since 2000, it has been owned by the Gannett newspaper chain.

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The newspaper was founded May 19, 1890, under the name The Arizona Republican.[2]

Dwight B. Heard, a Phoenix land and cattle baron, ran the newspaper from 1912 until his death in 1929. The paper was then run by two of its top executives, Charles Stauffer and W. Wesley Knorpp, until it was bought by Midwestern newspaper magnate Eugene C. Pulliam in 1946. Stauffer and Knorpp had changed the newspaper's name to The Arizona Republic in 1930, and also had bought the rival Phoenix Evening Gazette and Phoenix Weekly Gazette, later known, respectively, as The Phoenix Gazette and the Arizona Business Gazette.

Pulliam, who bought the two Gazettes as well as the Republic, ran all three newspapers until his death in 1975 at the age of 86. A strong period of growth came under Pulliam, who imprinted the newspaper with his conservative brand of politics and his drive for civic leadership. Pulliam was considered one of the influential business leaders who created the modern Phoenix area as it is known today.

Pulliam's holding company, Central Newspapers, Inc., as led by Pulliam's widow and son, assumed operation of the Republic/Gazette family of papers upon the elder Pulliam's death. The Phoenix Gazette was closed in 1997 and its staff merged with that of the Republic. The Arizona Business Gazette is still published to this day.

In 1998, a weekly section geared towards college students, "The Rep", went into circulation. Specialized content is also available in the local sections produced for many of the different cities and suburbs that make up the Phoenix metropolitan area.

Central Newspapers was purchased by Gannett in 2000, bringing it into common ownership with USA Today and the local Phoenix NBC television affiliate, KPNX. The Republic and KPNX combine their forces to produce their common local news subscription website, www.azcentral.com. In 2013, it dropped from the sixteenth daily newspaper in the United States to the twenty-first, by circulation,[3] on September 25, 2015, Mi-Ai Parrish was named Publisher and President of both the paper and its AZCentral.com website, effective October 12.[4]

Notable figures include Pulitzer-prize winning cartoonist Steve Benson, columnist Laurie Roberts, and Luis Manuel Ortiz, the only Hispanic member of the Arizona Journalism Hall of Fame. One of Arizona's best-known sports writers, Norm Frauenheim, retired in 2008. Multiple staff members have been finalists for the Pulitzer Prize. Other staff include photojournalist Michael Schennum.

An investigative reporter for the newspaper, Don Bolles, was the victim of a car bombing on June 2, 1976, dying eleven days afterward, he had been lured to a meeting in Phoenix in the course of work on a story about corruption in local politics and business and the bomb detonated as he started his car to leave. Retaliation against his pursuit of organized crime in Arizona is thought to be a motive in the murder.

On September 27, 2016, the paper endorsed Hillary Clinton for the 2016 presidential election, marking the first time in the paper's 126-year history that it had endorsed a Democratic candidate for president. Previously, the paper had only withheld its endorsement from a Republican nominee/candidate twice in its history.

During the unusual sequence of events that led up to the 1912 presidential election the paper had opted not to endorse the "formal" Republican party nominee for that election cycle, this was shortly after Theodore Roosevelt had lost the Republican convention nomination to Howard Taft in the controversial, and allegedly rigged,[6] party convention of that year. After Roosevelt's convention loss, and also after the hasty formation of the "made to order" Bull Moose Party, the paper continued to endorse Theodore Roosevelt via the newly formed party, as a result of Roosevelt's insistence on an independent presidential bid that year, the Republican party of 1912 was in disarray, yielding that year's presidential election to the Democrats, with the GOP only able to carry a total of 8 electoral votes that year. Two of the main planks of Roosevelt's progressive Bull Moose platform had been campaign finance reform and improved governmental accountability.

In the 1968 presidential election, the paper declined to endorse either Richard Nixon or Hubert Humphrey, asserting that "all candidates are good candidates."[7] In the paper's 2016 editorial decision to take the further step of actually endorsing a Democratic candidate for the first time, the paper argued that despite Clinton's flaws, it could not support Republican nominee Donald Trump, denouncing him as "not conservative" and "not qualified." The board also argued that Trump had "deep character flaws.... (and) ... stunning lack of human decency, empathy and respect," suggesting that it was evidence he "doesn't grasp our national ideals." The paper also noted its concern regarding whether or not Trump would possess the necessary restraint needed for someone with access to nuclear weapons, stating, "The president commands our nuclear arsenal. Trump can’t command his own rhetoric."[8][9]

1.
Daily newspaper
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A newspaper is a serial publication containing news about current events, other informative articles about politics, sports, arts, and so on, and advertising. A newspaper is usually, but not exclusively, printed on relatively inexpensive, the journalism organizations that publish newspapers are themselves often metonymically called newspapers. As of 2017, most newspapers are now published online as well as in print, the online versions are called online newspapers or news websites. Newspapers are typically published daily or weekly, News magazines are also weekly, but they have a magazine format. General-interest newspapers typically publish news articles and feature articles on national and international news as well as local news, typically the paper is divided into sections for each of those major groupings. Papers also include articles which have no byline, these articles are written by staff writers, a wide variety of material has been published in newspapers. As of 2017, newspapers may also provide information about new movies, most newspapers are businesses, and they pay their expenses with a mixture of subscription revenue, newsstand sales, and advertising revenue. Some newspapers are government-run or at least government-funded, their reliance on advertising revenue, the editorial independence of a newspaper is thus always subject to the interests of someone, whether owners, advertisers, or a government. Some newspapers with high editorial independence, high quality. This is a way to avoid duplicating the expense of reporting from around the world, circa 2005, there were approximately 6,580 daily newspaper titles in the world selling 395 million print copies a day. Worldwide annual revenue approached $100 billion in 2005-7, then plunged during the financial crisis of 2008-9. Revenue in 2016 fell to only $53 billion, hurting every major publisher as their efforts to gain online income fell far short of the goal. Besides remodeling advertising, the internet has also challenged the business models of the era by crowdsourcing both publishing in general and, more specifically, journalism. In addition, the rise of news aggregators, which bundle linked articles from online newspapers. Increasing paywalling of online newspapers may be counteracting those effects, the oldest newspaper still published is the Gazzetta di Mantova, which was established in Mantua in 1664. While online newspapers have increased access to newspapers by people with Internet access, literacy is also a factor which prevents people who cannot read from being able to benefit from reading newspapers. Periodicity, They are published at intervals, typically daily or weekly. This ensures that newspapers can provide information on newly-emerging news stories or events, currency, Its information is as up to date as its publication schedule allows

2.
Phoenix, Arizona
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Phoenix is the capital and most populous city of the U. S. state of Arizona. Phoenix is the anchor of the Phoenix metropolitan area, also known as the Valley of the Sun, the metropolitan area is the 12th largest by population in the United States, with approximately 4.3 million people as of 2010. Settled in 1867 as a community near the confluence of the Salt and Gila Rivers. Located in the reaches of the Sonoran Desert, Phoenix has a subtropical desert climate. Despite this, its canal system led to a farming community, many of the original crops remaining important parts of the Phoenix economy for decades, such as alfalfa, cotton, citrus. The city averaged a four percent annual growth rate over a 40-year period from the mid-1960s to the mid-2000s. This growth rate slowed during the Great Recession of 2007–09, and has rebounded slowly, Phoenix is the cultural center of the Valley of the Sun, as well as the entire state. For more than 2,000 years, the Hohokam people occupied the land that would become Phoenix, the Hohokam created roughly 135 miles of irrigation canals, making the desert land arable. Paths of these canals would later used for the modern Arizona Canal, Central Arizona Project Canal. The Hohokam also carried out trade with the nearby Anasazi, Mogollon and Sinagua. It is believed that between 1300 and 1450, periods of drought and severe floods led to the Hohokam civilizations abandonment of the area. After the departure of the Hohokam, groups of Akimel Oodham, Tohono Oodham and Maricopa tribes began to use the area, as well as segments of the Yavapai and Apache. The Oodham were offshoots of the Sobaipuri tribe, who in turn were thought to be the descendants of the formerly urbanized Hohokam and their crops included corn, beans, and squash for food, while cotton and tobacco were also cultivated. Mostly a peaceful group, they did together with the Maricopa for their mutual protection against incursions by both the Yuma and Apache tribes. The Tohono Oodham lived in the region as well, but their concentration was to the south. Living in small settlements, the Oodham were seasonal farmers who took advantage of the rains and they also hunted local game such as deer, rabbit, and javalina for meat. When the Mexican–American War ended in 1848, Mexico ceded its northern zone to the United States, the Phoenix area became part of the New Mexico Territory. In 1863 the mining town of Wickenburg was the first to be established in what is now Maricopa County, at the time Maricopa County had not yet been incorporated, the land was within Yavapai County, which included the major town of Prescott to the north of Wickenburg

3.
Arizona
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Arizona is a state in the southwestern region of the United States. It is also part of the Western United States and the Mountain West states and it is the sixth largest and the 14th most populous of the 50 states. Its capital and largest city is Phoenix, Arizona is one of the Four Corners states. It has borders with New Mexico, Utah, Nevada, California, and Mexico, Arizonas border with Mexico is 389 miles long, on the northern border of the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California. Arizona is the 48th state and last of the states to be admitted to the Union. Historically part of the territory of Alta California in New Spain, after being defeated in the Mexican–American War, Mexico ceded much of this territory to the United States in 1848. The southernmost portion of the state was acquired in 1853 through the Gadsden Purchase, Southern Arizona is known for its desert climate, with very hot summers and mild winters. There are ski resorts in the areas of Flagstaff, Alpine, in addition to the Grand Canyon National Park, there are several national forests, national parks, and national monuments. To the European settlers, their pronunciation sounded like Arissona, the area is still known as alĭ ṣonak in the Oodham language. Another possible origin is the Basque phrase haritz ona, as there were numerous Basque sheepherders in the area, There is a misconception that the states name originated from the Spanish term Árida Zona. See also lists of counties, islands, rivers, lakes, state parks, national parks, Arizona is in the Southwestern United States as one of the Four Corners states. Arizona is the sixth largest state by area, ranked after New Mexico, of the states 113,998 square miles, approximately 15% is privately owned. The remaining area is public forest and park land, state trust land, Arizona is well known for its desert Basin and Range region in the states southern portions, which is rich in a landscape of xerophyte plants such as the cactus. This regions topography was shaped by volcanism, followed by the cooling-off. Its climate has hot summers and mild winters. The state is well known for its pine-covered north-central portion of the high country of the Colorado Plateau. Like other states of the Southwest United States, Arizona has an abundance of mountains, despite the states aridity, 27% of Arizona is forest, a percentage comparable to modern-day France or Germany. The worlds largest stand of pine trees is in Arizona

4.
United States
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Forty-eight of the fifty states and the federal district are contiguous and located in North America between Canada and Mexico. The state of Alaska is in the northwest corner of North America, bordered by Canada to the east, the state of Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific Ocean. The U. S. territories are scattered about the Pacific Ocean, the geography, climate and wildlife of the country are extremely diverse. At 3.8 million square miles and with over 324 million people, the United States is the worlds third- or fourth-largest country by area, third-largest by land area. It is one of the worlds most ethnically diverse and multicultural nations, paleo-Indians migrated from Asia to the North American mainland at least 15,000 years ago. European colonization began in the 16th century, the United States emerged from 13 British colonies along the East Coast. Numerous disputes between Great Britain and the following the Seven Years War led to the American Revolution. On July 4,1776, during the course of the American Revolutionary War, the war ended in 1783 with recognition of the independence of the United States by Great Britain, representing the first successful war of independence against a European power. The current constitution was adopted in 1788, after the Articles of Confederation, the first ten amendments, collectively named the Bill of Rights, were ratified in 1791 and designed to guarantee many fundamental civil liberties. During the second half of the 19th century, the American Civil War led to the end of slavery in the country. By the end of century, the United States extended into the Pacific Ocean. The Spanish–American War and World War I confirmed the status as a global military power. The end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 left the United States as the sole superpower. The U. S. is a member of the United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Organization of American States. The United States is a developed country, with the worlds largest economy by nominal GDP. It ranks highly in several measures of performance, including average wage, human development, per capita GDP. While the U. S. economy is considered post-industrial, characterized by the dominance of services and knowledge economy, the United States is a prominent political and cultural force internationally, and a leader in scientific research and technological innovations. In 1507, the German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller produced a map on which he named the lands of the Western Hemisphere America after the Italian explorer and cartographer Amerigo Vespucci

5.
International Standard Serial Number
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An International Standard Serial Number is an eight-digit serial number used to uniquely identify a serial publication. The ISSN is especially helpful in distinguishing between serials with the same title, ISSN are used in ordering, cataloging, interlibrary loans, and other practices in connection with serial literature. The ISSN system was first drafted as an International Organization for Standardization international standard in 1971, ISO subcommittee TC 46/SC9 is responsible for maintaining the standard. When a serial with the content is published in more than one media type. For example, many serials are published both in print and electronic media, the ISSN system refers to these types as print ISSN and electronic ISSN, respectively. The format of the ISSN is an eight digit code, divided by a hyphen into two four-digit numbers, as an integer number, it can be represented by the first seven digits. The last code digit, which may be 0-9 or an X, is a check digit. Formally, the form of the ISSN code can be expressed as follows, NNNN-NNNC where N is in the set, a digit character. The ISSN of the journal Hearing Research, for example, is 0378-5955, where the final 5 is the check digit, for calculations, an upper case X in the check digit position indicates a check digit of 10. To confirm the check digit, calculate the sum of all eight digits of the ISSN multiplied by its position in the number, the modulus 11 of the sum must be 0. There is an online ISSN checker that can validate an ISSN, ISSN codes are assigned by a network of ISSN National Centres, usually located at national libraries and coordinated by the ISSN International Centre based in Paris. The International Centre is an organization created in 1974 through an agreement between UNESCO and the French government. The International Centre maintains a database of all ISSNs assigned worldwide, at the end of 2016, the ISSN Register contained records for 1,943,572 items. ISSN and ISBN codes are similar in concept, where ISBNs are assigned to individual books, an ISBN might be assigned for particular issues of a serial, in addition to the ISSN code for the serial as a whole. An ISSN, unlike the ISBN code, is an identifier associated with a serial title. For this reason a new ISSN is assigned to a serial each time it undergoes a major title change, separate ISSNs are needed for serials in different media. Thus, the print and electronic versions of a serial need separate ISSNs. Also, a CD-ROM version and a web version of a serial require different ISSNs since two different media are involved, however, the same ISSN can be used for different file formats of the same online serial

International Standard Serial Number
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ISSN encoded in an EAN-13 barcode with sequence variant 0 and issue number 5

6.
Dwight B. Heard
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Heard was a rancher in Arizona, along with the president of the Arizona Cotton Association. He is famous for publishing the Arizona Republican, now The Arizona Republic and he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1928. He died in 1929, a few months before the Heard Museum, Heard moved to Chicago from Wayland, Massachusetts, shortly after high school. He began working at Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett and Company, during his time as an employee, Heard met his wife, Maie Bartlett, while being mentored by Adolphus Bartlett, the father of Maie. Just one year later, the moved to Arizona after Heard was diagnosed with lung ailments. They settled in Phoenix in 1895 and decided to make it their home, in Arizona, Heard was one of the largest landowners in the Salt River Valley. He owned the Bartlett-Heard Land and Cattle Company, which sold cattle, alfalfa, citrus trees and he also was the president of the Arizona Cotton Growers Association, and was credited for making Arizonas cotton industry more competitive. His other business interests included real estate development and investment lending and he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1928. In 1912 Heard purchased the Arizona Republican, now the Arizona Republic, soon after his death, the Heard Museum was founded, housing Native American artifacts the Heards had acquired during their life in Phoenix

Dwight B. Heard
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Dwight B. Heard

7.
College
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College is an educational institution or a constituent part of one. A college may be a tertiary educational institution, a part of a collegiate or federal university. In ancient Rome a collegium was a club or society, a group of living together under a common set of rules. Aside from the educational context - nowadays the most common use of college - there are various other meanings also derived from the original Latin term. In the United States, college can be a synonym for university, in Singapore and India, this is known as a junior college. The municipal government of the city of Paris uses the sixth form college as the English name for a lycée. In some national education systems, secondary schools may be called colleges or have college as part of their title, in Australia the term college is applied to any private or independent primary and, especially, secondary school as distinct from a state school. Melbourne Grammar School, Cranbrook School, Sydney and The Kings School, there has also been a recent trend to rename or create government secondary schools as colleges. In the state of Victoria, some high schools are referred to as secondary colleges. Interestingly, the pre-eminent government secondary school for boys in Melbourne is still named Melbourne High School, in Western Australia, South Australia and the Northern Territory, college is used in the name of all state high schools built since the late 1990s, and also some older ones. In New South Wales, some schools, especially multi-campus schools resulting from mergers, are known as secondary colleges. In Queensland some newer schools which accept primary and high school students are styled state college, in Tasmania and the Australian Capital Territory, college refers to the final two years of high school, and the institutions which provide this. In this context, college is an independent of the other years of high school. Here, the expression is a version of matriculation college. This is because these schools have traditionally focused on academic, rather than vocational, subjects. Some private secondary schools choose to use the college in their names nevertheless. Some secondary schools elsewhere in the country, particularly ones within the school system. In New Zealand the word normally refers to a secondary school for ages 13 to 17

8.
USA Today
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USA Today is an internationally distributed American daily middle-market newspaper that serves as the flagship publication of its owner, the Gannett Company. Founded by Al Neuharth on September 15,1982, it operates from Gannetts corporate headquarters on Jones Branch Drive in McLean, Virginia and it is printed at 37 sites across the United States and at five additional sites internationally. USA Today is distributed in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, with an international edition distributed in Canada, Asia and the Pacific Islands, Gannett formally announced the launch of the paper on April 20,1982. USA Today began publishing on September 15,1982, initially launching in the Baltimore and Washington, on July 2,1984, the newspaper switched from a largely black-and-white to a color publication, featuring full color photography and graphics in all four sections. On April 8,1985, the paper published its first special bonus section, a 12-page section called Baseball 85, on May 6,1986, USA Today began printing production of its international edition in Switzerland. On April 15, USA Today launched an international printing site. On August 28,1995, an international publishing site was launched in Frankfurt, Germany, to print. On October 4,1999, USA Today began running advertisements on its front page for the first time. The paper launched a sixth printing site for its international edition on May 15,2000, in Milan, Italy, followed on July 10 by the launch of a printing facility in Charleroi. That November, USA Today migrated its operations from Gannetts previous corporate headquarters in Arlington, in 2010, USA Today launched the USA Today API for sharing data with partners of all types. On August 27,2010, USA Today announced that it would undergo a reorganization of its newsroom and it also announced that the paper would shift its focus away from print and place more emphasis on its digital platforms and launch of a new publication called USA Today Sports. On September 14,2012, USA Today underwent the first major redesign in its history, to accomplish this goal, Gannett migrated its newspaper and television station websites to the Presto platform and the USA Today site design throughout 2013 and 2014. On January 4,2014, USA Today acquired the book and film review website, on September 3,2014, USA Today announced that it would lay off roughly 70 employees in a restructuring of its newsroom and business operations. In October 2014, USA Today and OpenWager Inc. entered into a partnership to release a Bingo app called USA TODAY Bingo Cruise, USA Today is known for synthesizing news down to easy-to-read-and-comprehend stories. In the main edition circulated in the United States and some Canadian cities, each consists of four sections, News, Money, Sports. The international edition of the paper features two sections, News and Money in one, with Sports and Life in the other, atypical of most daily newspapers, the paper does not print on Saturdays and Sundays, the Friday edition serves as the weekend edition. USA Today prints each complete story on the front page of the section with the exception of the cover story. The cover story is a story that requires a jump

USA Today
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The April 14, 2015 front page of USA Today. The blue circle of the logo has been turned into a dotted ring with a hat being tossed into it to signify Marco Rubio'sannouncement that he is running for President of the United States.
USA Today
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USA Today
USA Today
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This February 5, 2009 issue of USA Today shows the old layout and logo of the paper prior to it being redesigned in 2012.
USA Today
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USA Today is headquartered in Tysons Corner, Virginia.

9.
NBC
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The National Broadcasting Company is an American commercial broadcast television network that is the flagship property of NBCUniversal, a subsidiary of Comcast. The network is part of the Big Three television networks, founded in 1926 by the Radio Corporation of America, NBC is the oldest major broadcast network in the United States. Following the acquisition by GE, Bob Wright served as executive officer of NBC, remaining in that position until his retirement in 2007. In 2003, French media company Vivendi merged its entertainment assets with GE, Comcast purchased a controlling interest in the company in 2011, and acquired General Electrics remaining stake in 2013. Following the Comcast merger, Zucker left NBC Universal and was replaced as CEO by Comcast executive Steve Burke, during a period of early broadcast business consolidation, radio manufacturer Radio Corporation of America acquired New York City radio station WEAF from American Telephone & Telegraph. Westinghouse, a shareholder in RCA, had an outlet in Newark, New Jersey pioneer station WJZ. This station was transferred from Westinghouse to RCA in 1923, WEAF acted as a laboratory for AT&Ts manufacturing and supply outlet Western Electric, whose products included transmitters and antennas. The Bell System, AT&Ts telephone utility, was developing technologies to transmit voice- and music-grade audio over short and long distances, the 1922 creation of WEAF offered a research-and-development center for those activities. WEAF maintained a schedule of radio programs, including some of the first commercially sponsored programs. In an early example of chain or networking broadcasting, the station linked with Outlet Company-owned WJAR in Providence, Rhode Island, AT&T refused outside companies access to its high-quality phone lines. The early effort fared poorly, since the telegraph lines were susceptible to atmospheric. In 1925, AT&T decided that WEAF and its network were incompatible with the companys primary goal of providing a telephone service. AT&T offered to sell the station to RCA in a deal that included the right to lease AT&Ts phone lines for network transmission, the divisions ownership was split among RCA, its founding corporate parent General Electric and Westinghouse. NBC officially started broadcasting on November 15,1926, WEAF and WJZ, the flagships of the two earlier networks, were operated side-by-side for about a year as part of the new NBC. On April 5,1927, NBC expanded to the West Coast with the launch of the NBC Orange Network and this was followed by the debut of the NBC Gold Network, also known as the Pacific Gold Network, on October 18,1931. The Orange Network carried Red Network programming, and the Gold Network carried programming from the Blue Network, initially, the Orange Network recreated Eastern Red Network programming for West Coast stations at KPO in San Francisco. The Orange Network name was removed from use in 1936, at the same time, the Gold Network became part of the Blue Network. In the 1930s, NBC also developed a network for shortwave radio stations, in 1927, NBC moved its operations to 711 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan, occupying the upper floors of a building designed by architect Floyd Brown

10.
Pulitzer Prize
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The Pulitzer Prize /ˈpʊlᵻtsər/ is an award for achievements in newspaper, magazine and online journalism, literature, and musical composition in the United States. It was established in 1917 by provisions in the will of American Joseph Pulitzer who had made his fortune as a newspaper publisher, Prizes are awarded yearly in twenty-one categories. In twenty of the categories, each receives a certificate. The winner in the service category of the journalism competition is awarded a gold medal. The Pulitzer Prize does not automatically consider all applicable works in the media, entries must fit in at least one of the specific prize categories, and cannot simply gain entrance for being literary or musical. Works can also only be entered in a maximum of two categories, regardless of their properties, each year,102 jurors are selected by the Pulitzer Prize Board to serve on 20 separate juries for the 21 award categories, one jury makes recommendations for both photography awards. For each award category, a jury makes three nominations, the board selects the winner by majority vote from the nominations or bypasses the nominations and selects a different entry following a 75% majority vote. The board can also vote to issue no award, the board and journalism jurors are not paid for their work, however, the jurors in letters, music, and drama receive a $2,000 honorarium for the year, and each chair receives $2,500. Anyone whose work has been submitted is called an entrant, the jury selects a group of nominated finalists and announces them, together with the winner for each category. However, some journalists who were submitted, but not nominated as finalists. For example, Bill Dedman of msnbc, Dedman wrote, To call that submission a Pulitzer nomination is like saying that Adam Sandler is an Oscar nominee if Columbia Pictures enters Thats My Boy in the Academy Awards. Many readers realize that the Oscars dont work that way—the studios dont pick the nominees and its just a way of slipping Academy Awards into a bio. The Pulitzers also dont work that way, but fewer people know that, newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer gave money in his will to Columbia University to launch a journalism school and establish the Prize. It allocated $250,000 to the prize and scholarships and he specified four awards in journalism, four in letters and drama, one in education, and four traveling scholarships. After his death, the first Pulitzer Prizes were awarded June 4,1917, many people have won more than one Pulitzer Prize. Nelson Harding is the person to have won a Prize in two consecutive years, the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning in 1927 and 1928. Four prizes Robert Frost, Poetry Eugene ONeill, Drama Robert E, in rare instances, contributors to the entry are singled out in the citation in a manner analogous to individual winners. Journalism awards may be awarded to individuals or newspapers or newspaper staffs, infrequently, Awards are made in categories relating to journalism, arts, letters and fiction

Pulitzer Prize
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Pulitzer Prize

11.
Don Bolles
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Don Bolles was an American investigative reporter for The Arizona Republic whose murder in a car bombing has been linked to his coverage of the mafia. Donald Fifield Bolles grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey, and attended Teaneck High School and he pursued a newspaper career, in the footsteps of his father and grandfather. He graduated from Beloit College with a degree in government, where he was editor of the campus newspaper, and received a Presidents Award for personal achievement. After a stint in the United States Army in the Korean War assigned to a unit, he joined the Associated Press as a sports editor and rewriter in New York, New Jersey. In 1962 he was hired by the Arizona Republic newspaper, published at the time by Eugene C, pulliam, where he quickly found a spot on the investigative beat and gained a reputation for dogged reporting of influence peddling, bribery, and land fraud. Bolles was the brother of Richard Nelson Bolles, author of the best-selling job-hunting book What Color is Your Parachute and he shares a grandfather, Stephen Bolles, with humanist theoretician Edmund Blair Bolles. He was married twice and had a total of seven children and his daughter, Frances Bolles Haynes, has co-authored four books on job hunting. On June 2,1976, Bolles left behind a note in his office typewriter explaining he would meet with an informant, then go to a luncheon meeting. He was responsible for covering a routine hearing at the State Capitol, the source promised information on a land deal involving top state politicians and possibly the mob. A wait of several minutes in the lobby of the Hotel Clarendon was concluded with a call for Bolles himself to the front desk, Bolles then exited the hotel, his car in the adjacent parking lot just south of the hotel on Fourth Avenue. Both legs and one arm were amputated over a ten-day stay in St. Josephs Hospital, the eleventh day was the reporters last. However, his last words after being found in the lot the day of the bombing included John Adamson, Emprise and Mafia. The mob doesnt kill cops and reporters and this is not a Mafia case. The article stated Bolles,47, frequently wrote about land fraud, eventually resulted in passage of an emergency measure legislative bill opening blind trusts to public scrutiny. Emprise referred to the New York-based horse- and dog-racing company of the same name, Bolles identified Arizona resident John Harvey Adamson by photograph while hospitalized, and Adamsons former lawyer Mickey Clifton informed the police of Adamsons involvement in the bombing. According to trial testimony, Adamson had gone to San Diego with a girlfriend, police searching his apartment later found the electronics for one bomb. Also according to testimony, Adamson early on June 2 went to the Arizona Republic employees parking area. John Harvey Adamson pleaded guilty in 1977 to second-degree murder for building and planting the bomb that killed Bolles

12.
George W. Bush
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George Walker Bush is an American politician who served as the 43rd President of the United States from 2001 to 2009. He was also the 46th Governor of Texas from 1995 to 2000 and he is the eldest son of Barbara and George H. W. Bush. After graduating from Yale University in 1968 and Harvard Business School in 1975, Bush married Laura Welch in 1977 and ran unsuccessfully for the House of Representatives shortly thereafter. He later co-owned the Texas Rangers baseball team before defeating Ann Richards in the 1994 Texas gubernatorial election and he is the second president to assume the nations highest office after his father, following the lead of John Quincy Adams. He is also a brother of Jeb Bush, a former Governor of Florida who was a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination in the 2016 presidential election, the September 11 terrorist attacks occurred eight months into Bushs first term as president. Bush responded with what became known as the Bush Doctrine, launching a War on Terror, a military campaign that included the war in Afghanistan in 2001. He also promoted policies on the economy, health care, education, Social Security reform and his tenure included national debates on immigration, Social Security, electronic surveillance, and torture. In the 2004 Presidential race, Bush defeated Democratic Senator John Kerry in another close election. After his re-election, Bush received increasingly heated criticism from across the spectrum for his handling of the Iraq War, Hurricane Katrina. Amid this criticism, the Democratic Party regained control of Congress in the 2006 elections, Bush left office in 2009, returning to Texas where he purchased a home in Crawford. He wrote a memoir, Decision Points and his presidential library was opened in 2013. His presidency has been ranked among the worst in historians polls published in the late 2000s and 2010s. George Walker Bush was born on July 6,1946, at Grace-New Haven Hospital in New Haven, Connecticut, as the first child of George Herbert Walker Bush and his wife, the former Barbara Pierce. He was raised in Midland and Houston, Texas, with four siblings, Jeb, Neil, Marvin, another younger sister, Robin, died from leukemia at the age of three in 1953. His grandfather, Prescott Bush, was a U. S and his father, George H. W. Bush, was Ronald Reagans Vice President from 1981 to 1989 and the 41st U. S. President from 1989 to 1993. Bush has English and some German ancestry, along with more distant Dutch, Welsh, Irish, French, Bush attended public schools in Midland, Texas, until the family moved to Houston after he had completed seventh grade. He then spent two years at The Kinkaid School, a school in Houston. Bush attended high school at Phillips Academy, a school in Andover, Massachusetts

George W. Bush
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George W. Bush
George W. Bush
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Lt. George W. Bush while in the Texas Air National Guard
George W. Bush
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George W. Bush with his father outside the White House, April 29, 1992
George W. Bush
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Governor Bush (right) with father, former president George H. W. Bush and wife, Laura, in 1997

13.
United States presidential election, 2000
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The United States presidential election of 2000 was the 54th quadrennial presidential election. It was held on Tuesday, November 7,2000, Bush was seen as the early favorite for the Republican nomination and, despite a contentious primary battle with Senator John McCain and other candidates, secured the nomination by Super Tuesday. Bush chose former Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney as his running mate, both major party candidates focused primarily on domestic issues, such as the budget, tax relief, and reforms for federal social insurance programs, although foreign policy was not ignored. Clinton and Gore often did not campaign together, a deliberate decision resulting from the Lewinsky sex scandal two years prior. This was the closest presidential election in the history, with a. 009% margin,537 votes. The narrow margin there triggered a mandatory machine recount the next day, after which Gore requested recounts in four counties, including populous South Florida, litigation ensued in numerous counties in both state and federal courts, ultimately reaching the Florida Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. Nationwide, this was the presidential election in which the winner received fewer votes than his opponent. After the election, recounts conducted by news media organizations continued a primary focus on ballots that machines read as not showing a vote. Based on the review of these ballots, their results indicated that Bush would have won if certain recounting methods had been used, but that Gore might have won under other standards and scenarios. The Green Party gained widespread attention during the 2000 presidential election when the ticket composed of Ralph Nader. Nader was vilified by some Democrats, who accused him of spoiling the election for Al Gore, Naders impact on the 2000 election has remained controversial. Until 2016, this was the last time a Republican candidate won a vote in the region of New England. As of 2017, this was the last election where a Republican candidate won New Hampshire, traditionally, the primary elections are indirect elections where voters cast ballots for a slate of party delegates pledged to a particular candidate. The partys delegates then officially nominate a candidate to run on the partys behalf, President Bill Clinton, a Democrat and former Governor of Arkansas, was ineligible to seek reelection to a third term due to restrictions of the Twenty-second Amendment. In accordance with Section I of the Twentieth Amendment, his term expired at 12,00 noon EST on January 20,2001, Democratic candidates Al Gore, Vice President of the United States Bill Bradley, former U. S. Senator from New Jersey Al Gore from Tennessee was a consistent front-runner for the nomination, of these, only Wellstone formed an exploratory committee. Running an insurgency campaign, Bradley positioned himself as the alternative to Gore, the closest Bradley came to a victory was his 50–46 loss to Gore in the New Hampshire primary. On March 14, Al Gore clinched the Democratic nomination, none of Bradleys delegates were allowed to vote for him, so Gore won the nomination unanimously at the Democratic National Convention

14.
University of California
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The University of California is a public university system in the U. S. state of California. The University of California was founded in 1868 and operated temporarily in Oakland until opening its first campus in Berkeley in 1873 and its tenth and newest campus in Merced opened in fall 2005. Nine campuses enroll both undergraduate and graduate students, one campus, UC San Francisco, enrolls only graduate and professional students in the medical and health sciences. In addition, the UC Hastings College of Law, located in San Francisco, is affiliated with UC. The University of Californias campuses have large numbers of distinguished faculty in almost every academic discipline, as of 2016, UC faculty and researchers have won 62 Nobel Prizes. UC campuses are perennially ranked highly by various publications, internationally, UC Berkeley, UCLA, and UC San Diego are respectively ranked 3rd, 12th, and 14th worldwide by Academic Ranking of World Universities. In 1849, the state of California ratified its first constitution, taking advantage of the Morrill Land-Grant Acts, the California Legislature established an Agricultural, Mining, and Mechanical Arts College in 1866. However, it existed only on paper, as a placeholder to secure federal land-grant funds, meanwhile, Congregational minister Henry Durant, an alumnus of Yale, had established the private Contra Costa Academy, on June 20,1853, in Oakland, California. The initial site was bounded by Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets and Harrison, the Colleges trustees, educators, and supporters believed in the importance of a liberal arts education, but ran into a lack of interest in liberal arts colleges on the American frontier. In November 1857, the Colleges trustees began to acquire parcels of land facing the Golden Gate in what is now Berkeley for a future planned campus outside of Oakland. But first, they needed to secure the Colleges water rights by buying a farm to the east. In 1864, they organized the College Homestead Association, which borrowed $35,000 to purchase the land, the Association subdivided the latter parcel and started selling lots with the hope it could raise enough money to repay its lenders and also create a new college town. But sales of new homesteads fell short, at the College of Californias 1867 commencement exercises, where Low was present, Benjamin Silliman, Jr. criticized Californians for creating a state polytechnic school instead of a real university. That same day, Low reportedly first suggested a merger of the already-functional College of California with the state college. The University of Californias second president, Daniel Coit Gilman, opened its new campus in Berkeley in September 1873, earlier that year, Toland Medical College in San Francisco had agreed to become the Universitys Medical Department, it later evolved into UCSF. In 1878, the University established Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco as its first law school, the California Constitution was amended to designate Hastings as the Law Department of the University of California in consideration of a $100,000 gift from Serranus Clinton Hastings. Hastings is the only UC campus not governed by the Regents of the University of California, in August 1882, the California State Normal School opened a second school in Los Angeles to train teachers for the growing population of Southern California. In 1927, it became the University of California at Los Angeles, during the 20th century, UC acquired additional satellite locations which, like Los Angeles, were all subordinate to administrators at the Berkeley campus

University of California
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Berkeley (1868)
University of California
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University of California
University of California
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San Francisco (1873)
University of California
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Los Angeles (1919)

15.
Janet Napolitano
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She has been president of the University of California system since September 2013, shortly after she resigned as Secretary of Homeland Security. Prior to her election as governor, she served as Attorney General of Arizona from 1999 to 2003 and she was the first woman and the 23rd person to serve in that office. Napolitano is the 1977 Truman Scholar from New Mexico and she has been the first woman to serve in several offices, including Attorney General of Arizona, Secretary of Homeland Security, and president of the University of California. Forbes ranked her as the ninth most powerful woman in 2012. In 2008, she was cited by The New York Times to be among the women most likely to become the first female President of the United States, some political commentators suggested that a possible candidacy in the 2016 election. She has also discussed as a contender for appointment to the U. S. Supreme Court. Janet Napolitano was born on November 29,1957, in New York City, the daughter of Jane Marie and Leonard Michael Napolitano and her father was of Italian descent and her mother had German and Austrian ancestry. She is the oldest of three children, she has a brother and sister. She was raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Albuquerque, New Mexico and she graduated from Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California, where she won a Truman Scholarship, and was valedictorian. In 1978, she studied for a term at the London School of Economics as part of Santa Claras exchange programme through IES Abroad and she then received her Juris Doctor from the University of Virginia School of Law. In 1991, while a partner at Lewis and Roca LLP, in 1993, Napolitano was appointed by President Bill Clinton as United States Attorney for the District of Arizona. As U. S. Attorney, she was involved in the investigation of Michael Fortier of Kingman, Arizona and she ran for and won the position of Arizona Attorney General in 1998. During her tenure as general, she focused on consumer protection issues. While still serving as general, she spoke at the 2000 Democratic National Convention just three weeks after having a mastectomy. Napolitano recalls that the pain was so unbearable that she couldnt stand up, work and family helped me focus on other things while I battled the cancer, says Napolitano. I am very grateful for all the support I had from family, friends and she was Arizonas third female governor and the first woman in the United States to be elected governor to succeed another elected female governor. She was also the first Democrat popularly elected to the governorship since Bruce Babbitt left office in 1987, in November 2005, Time magazine named her one of the five best governors in the U. S. As Governor, Napolitano set records for number of vetoes issued

16.
Harry Mitchell
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Harry E. Mitchell is a former U. S. Representative who represented Arizonas 5th congressional district from 2007 until 2011 and he is a member of the Democratic Party. Born and raised in Tempe, Arizona, Mitchell earned a degree in political science from Arizona State University in 1962. He later earned a Master of Public Administration degree from ASU in 1980 and he was a teacher at Tempe High School, his high school alma mater. He was also a professor, a member of the Tempe city council, 1970-1978, Mayor of Tempe, 1978-1994, a member of the Arizona senate, 1999-2006 and he was elected as a Democrat to the 110th and 111th Congress. He was a candidate for reelection to the 112th Congress in 2010. In 1970, Harry Mitchell sought and won a seat on the elected-at-large Tempe City Council, re-elected in 1974, Mitchell ran for Mayor of Tempe in 1978, gaining a majority of votes cast in the primary and avoiding a runoff. He went on to win every subsequent election for Mayor in landslides until his retirement in 1994, a large statue of Mitchell stands just off Mill Avenue, next to City Hall and the other buildings comprising the Harry E. Mitchell Municipal Complex. Mitchell narrowly lost in the primary — he attributes his only loss to his inexperience in partisan races —. Four years later, however, Mitchell sought and won a seat in the Arizona Senate, representing Tempe, even though his district was considered a swing district, Mitchell managed to win with clear majorities in each successive election. Facing term limits, Mitchell ran his last campaign for Arizona Senate in 2004 and he was elected on August 20,2005. Mitchell oversaw much of the ground work as the Arizona Democratic Party prepared for statewide elections on November 7,2006. The Democrats recaptured the Tucson city council from years of Republican control on February 1,2006 and his voting record has been described as blue dog and centrist. He has voted for legislation supported by Democrats in Congress. Although he expressed reservations about many of the provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, stating it was a matter of principle, he declined coverage under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program in favor of Medicare. He voted for the 2009 stimulus plan and has stated he supports extending the Bush tax cuts. Mitchell was pressured by several Arizona politicians and Rep. Rahm Emanuel, then head of the DCCC, Mitchell stepped down as the chair of the Arizona Democratic Party on April 7. He entered the race on April 10 and raised a total of $213,209 for his campaign in less than two weeks, by of the end of June 2006, Mitchell had nearly $700,000 on hand

Harry Mitchell
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Harry Mitchell

17.
Hillary Clinton
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Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton is an American politician who was the 67th United States Secretary of State from 2009 to 2013, U. S. Senator from New York from 2001 to 2009, First Lady of the United States from 1993 to 2001, and the Democratic Partys nominee for President of the United States in the 2016 election. Born in Chicago, Illinois, and raised in the Chicago suburb of Park Ridge, Clinton graduated from Wellesley College in 1969, after serving as a congressional legal counsel, she moved to Arkansas and married Bill Clinton in 1975. In 1977, she co-founded Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families and she was appointed the first female chair of the Legal Services Corporation in 1978 and became the first female partner at Rose Law Firm the following year. As First Lady of Arkansas, she led a force whose recommendations helped reform Arkansass public schools. As First Lady of the United States, Clinton fought for gender equality, because her marriage survived the Lewinsky scandal, her role as first lady drew a polarized response from the public. Clinton was elected in 2000 as the first female senator from New York and she was re-elected to the Senate in 2006. Running for president in 2008, she won far more delegates than any previous female candidate, as Secretary of State in the Obama administration from 2009 to 2013, Clinton responded to the Arab Spring, during which she advocated the U. S. military intervention in Libya. Leaving office after Obamas first term, she wrote her book and undertook speaking engagements. Clinton made a presidential run in 2016. She became the first female candidate to be nominated for president by a major U. S. political party, despite winning a plurality of the national popular vote, Clinton lost the Electoral College and the presidency to her Republican rival Donald Trump. Hillary Diane Rodham was born on October 26,1947, at Edgewater Hospital in Chicago, Illinois. In 1995, Clinton claimed that her mother had named her after Sir Edmund Hillary, co-first mountaineer to scale Mount Everest, however, the Everest climb did not take place until 1953, more than five years after Clinton was born. Clinton was raised in a United Methodist family, living first in Chicago and her father, Hugh Ellsworth Rodham, was of English and Welsh descent, and managed a small but successful textile business. Her mother, Dorothy Emma Howell, was a homemaker of Dutch, English, French Canadian, Scottish, Clinton has two younger brothers, Hugh and Tony. As a child, Rodham was a student of her teachers at the public schools that she attended in Park Ridge. She participated in such as swimming and baseball, and earned numerous badges as a Brownie. She attended Maine East High School, where she participated in the student council, the school newspaper, and was selected for the National Honor Society

18.
United States presidential election, 2016
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The United States presidential election of 2016 was the 58th quadrennial American presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 8,2016. The Republican ticket of businessman Donald Trump and Indiana Governor Mike Pence defeated the Democratic ticket of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Senator from Virginia Tim Kaine. Trump took office as the 45th President, and Pence as the 48th Vice President, on January 20,2017. Concurrent with the election, Senate, House, and many gubernatorial and state. While Clinton received about 2.9 million more votes nationwide, leading up to the election, a Trump victory was considered unlikely by almost all media forecasts. In the Electoral College vote on December 19, seven electors voted against their pledged candidates, a further three electors attempted to vote against Clinton but were replaced or forced to vote again. Ultimately, Trump received 304 electoral votes and Clinton garnered 227, Trump is the fifth person in U. S. history to become president while losing the nationwide popular vote. It was also the first time since the 1828 election of Democrat Andrew Jackson that a vote split occurred in Maine. On January 6,2017, the United States governments intelligence agencies concluded that the Russian government interfered in the 2016 United States elections. A joint U. S. intelligence review stated with confidence that Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the US presidential election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the U. S. democratic process, denigrate Secretary Hillary Clinton, investigations about potential collusion between the Trump campaign and Russian officials were started by the FBI, the Senate Intelligence Committee and the House Intelligence Committee. Traditionally, the elections are indirect elections where voters cast ballots for a slate of party delegates pledged to a particular candidate. The partys delegates then officially nominate a candidate to run on the partys behalf, President Barack Obama, a Democrat and former U. S. The series of primary elections and caucuses took place between February and June 2016, staggered among the 50 states, the District of Columbia. With seventeen major candidates entering the race, starting with Ted Cruz on March 23,2015, prior to the Iowa caucuses on February 1,2016, Perry, Walker, Jindal, Graham and Pataki withdrew due to low polling numbers. Despite leading many polls in Iowa, Trump came in second to Cruz, after which Huckabee, Paul, following a sizable victory for Trump in the New Hampshire primary, Christie, Fiorina and Gilmore abandoned the race. Bush followed suit after scoring fourth place to Trump, Rubio and Cruz in South Carolina. On March 1,2016, the first of four Super Tuesday primaries, Rubio won his first contest in Minnesota, Cruz won Alaska, Oklahoma and his home of Texas, failing to gain traction, Carson suspended his campaign a few days later. On March 15,2016, the second Super Tuesday, Kasich won his only contest in his state of Ohio

United States presidential election, 2016
United States presidential election, 2016
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United States presidential election, 2016
United States presidential election, 2016
United States presidential election, 2016

19.
United States presidential election, 1912
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The United States presidential election of 1912 was the 32nd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 5,1912. The election was a rare four-way contest, incumbent President William Howard Taft was renominated by the Republican Party with the support of its conservative wing. After former President Theodore Roosevelt failed to receive the Republican nomination, he called his own convention and it nominated Roosevelt and ran candidates for other offices in major states. Meanwhile, the Socialist Party of America renominated its perennial standard-bearer and it is the last election in which a former, or incumbent, President ran for the office without being nominated as either a Democrat or Republican. It is also the last election in which an incumbent president running for re-election failed to either first or second in the popular vote count. Wilson won the election, gaining a majority in the Electoral College and winning 42% of the popular vote, while Roosevelt won 27%, Taft 23%. Wilson became the elected president from the Democratic Party between 1896 and 1932, and the second of only two Democrats to be elected president between 1860 and 1932. This was also the last election in more than one nominee had previously been elected president. Republican President Theodore Roosevelt had declined to run for re-election in 1908 in fulfillment of a pledge to the American people not to seek a full term. Roosevelts first term as president was incomplete, as he succeeded to the office upon the assassination of William McKinley and he had tapped Secretary of War William Howard Taft to become his successor, and Taft defeated Democrat William Jennings Bryan in the general election. The progressive Republicans favored restrictions on the employment of women and children, promoted ecological conservation, the progressives were also in favor of the popular election of federal and state judges and opposed to having judges appointed by the president or state governors. By 1910 the split between the two wings of the Republican Party was deep, and this, in turn, caused Roosevelt and Taft to turn against one another, despite their personal friendship. Republican candidates, William Howard Taft, President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt, La Follette, Senator from Wisconsin For the first time, significant numbers of delegates to the national conventions were elected in presidential preference primaries. Primary elections were advocated by the faction of the Republican Party. Altogether, twelve states held Republican primaries, La Follette won two of the first four primaries. Beginning with his victory in Illinois on April 9, however, Roosevelt won nine of the last ten presidential primaries. As a sign of his popularity, Roosevelt even carried Tafts home state of Ohio. The Republican Convention was held in Chicago from June 18 to 22, Taft, however, had begun to gather delegates earlier, and the delegates chosen in the primaries were a minority

United States presidential election, 1912
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All 531 electoral votes of the Electoral College 266 electoral votes needed to win
United States presidential election, 1912
United States presidential election, 1912

20.
Theodore Roosevelt
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Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was an American statesman, author, explorer, soldier, naturalist, and reformer who served as the 26th president of the United States from 1901 to 1909. As a leader of the Republican Party during this time, he became a force for the Progressive Era in the United States in the early 20th century. Born a sickly child with debilitating asthma, Roosevelt successfully overcame his health problems by embracing a strenuous lifestyle and he integrated his exuberant personality, vast range of interests, and world-famous achievements into a cowboy persona defined by robust masculinity. Home-schooled, he began a lifelong naturalist avocation before attending Harvard College and his first of many books, The Naval War of 1812, established his reputation as both a learned historian and as a popular writer. Upon entering politics, he became the leader of the faction of Republicans in New Yorks state legislature. Returning a war hero, he was elected governor of New York in 1898, the state party leadership distrusted him, so they took the lead in moving him to the prestigious but powerless role of vice presidential candidate as McKinleys running mate in the election of 1900. Roosevelt campaigned vigorously across the country, helping McKinleys re-election in a victory based on a platform of peace, prosperity. Following the assassination of President McKinley in September 1901, Roosevelt succeeded to the office at age 42, making conservation a top priority, he established a myriad of new national parks, forests, and monuments intended to preserve the nations natural resources. In foreign policy, he focused on Central America, where he began construction of the Panama Canal and he greatly expanded the United States Navy and sent the Great White Fleet on a world tour to project the United States naval power around the globe. His successful efforts to end the Russo-Japanese War won him the 1906 Nobel Peace Prize, elected in 1904 to a full term, Roosevelt continued to promote progressive policies, but many of his efforts and much of his legislative agenda were eventually blocked in Congress. Roosevelt successfully groomed his close friend, William Howard Taft, to succeed him in the presidency, after leaving office, Roosevelt went on safari in Africa and toured Europe. Returning to the United States, he became frustrated with Tafts approach, failing to win the Republican presidential nomination in 1912, Roosevelt founded his own party, the Progressive, so-called Bull Moose Party, and called for wide-ranging progressive reforms. The split among Republicans enabled the Democrats to win both the White House and a majority in the Congress in 1912, Republicans aligned with Taft nationally would control the Republican Party for decades. Frustrated at home, Roosevelt led an expedition to the Amazon basin. During World War I, he opposed President Woodrow Wilson for keeping the country out of the war, and offered his military services, although planning to run again for president in 1920, Roosevelt suffered deteriorating health and died in early 1919. Roosevelt has consistently ranked by scholars as one of the greatest American presidents. Historians admire Roosevelt for rooting out corruption in his administration, but are critical of his 1909 libel lawsuits against the World and his face was carved into Mount Rushmore, alongside those of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln. Theodore Roosevelt Jr. was born on October 27,1858, at East 20th Street in New York City and he was the second of four children born to socialite Martha Stewart Mittie Bulloch and glass businessman and philanthropist Theodore Roosevelt Sr

21.
Howard Taft
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William Howard Taft served as the 27th President of the United States and as the tenth Chief Justice of the United States, the only person to have held both offices. In 1921, President Warren G. Harding appointed Taft to be chief justice, Taft was born in Cincinnati in 1857. His father, Alphonso Taft, was a U. S. Attorney General, William Taft attended Yale and was a member of Skull and Bones secret society like his father, and after becoming a lawyer was appointed a judge while still in his twenties. He continued a rapid rise, being named Solicitor General and as a judge of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, in 1901, President William McKinley appointed Taft civilian governor of the Philippines. In 1904, Roosevelt made him Secretary of War, and he became Roosevelts hand-picked successor, despite his personal ambition to become chief justice, Taft declined repeated offers of appointment to the Supreme Court of the United States, believing his political work to be more important. With Roosevelts help, Taft had little opposition for the Republican nomination for president in 1908, in the White House, he focused on East Asia more than European affairs, and repeatedly intervened to prop up or remove Latin American governments. Taft sought reductions to trade tariffs, then a source of governmental income. Controversies over conservation and over antitrust cases filed by the Taft administration served to separate the two men. Roosevelt challenged Taft for renomination in 1912, Taft used his control of the party machinery to gain a bare majority of delegates, and Roosevelt bolted the party. The split left Taft with little chance of re-election, he took only Utah, after leaving office, Taft returned to Yale as a professor, continuing his political activity and working against war through the League to Enforce Peace. In 1921, President Harding appointed Taft as chief justice, an office he had long sought, Chief Justice Taft was a conservative on business issues, but under him, there were advances in individual rights. In poor health, he resigned in February 1930, after his death the next month, he was buried at Arlington National Cemetery, the first president and first Supreme Court justice to be interred there. Taft is generally listed near the middle in historians rankings of U. S. presidents, William Howard Taft was born September 15,1857 in Cincinnati, Ohio, to Alphonso Taft and Louise Torrey. The Taft family was not wealthy, living in a modest home in the suburb of Mount Auburn, Alphonso served as a judge, ambassador and in the cabinet, as War Secretary and Attorney General under Ulysses S. Grant. William Taft was not seen as brilliant as a child, but was a worker, Tafts demanding parents pushed him and his four brothers toward success. He attended Woodward High School in Cincinnati, at Yale College, which he entered in 1874, the heavyset, jovial Taft was popular. One classmate described him succeeding through hard work rather than being the smartest, in 1878, Taft graduated, second in his class out of 121. He attended Cincinnati Law School, and graduated with a Bachelor of Laws in 1880, while in law school, he worked on The Cincinnati Commercial newspaper, edited by Murat Halstead

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William Taft
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Yale College photograph of Taft
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William Howard Taft addressing the audience at the Philippine Assembly in the Manila Grand Opera House.
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One of a series of candid photographs known as the Evolution of a Smile, taken just after a formal portrait session, while Taft learns by telephone from Roosevelt that he has been nominated by the Republican Party for the office of President.

22.
United States presidential election, 1968
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The United States presidential election of 1968 was the 46th quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 5,1968. The Republican nominee, former Vice President Richard Nixon, won the election over the Democratic nominee, analysts have argued the election of 1968 was a major realigning election as it permanently disrupted the New Deal Coalition that had dominated presidential politics for 36 years. The 1968 Democratic National Convention was a scene of violent confrontations between police and anti-war protesters as the Democrats split into multiple factions, Richard Nixon ran on a campaign that promised to restore law and order to the nations cities and provide new leadership in the Vietnam War. A year later, he would popularize the term silent majority to describe those he viewed as being his target voters, Nixon won the popular vote by a narrow margin of 0.7 percentage points, but won easily in the Electoral College, 301–191. The election also featured a third party effort by former Alabama Governor George Wallace. He carried five states in the Deep South and ran well in some ethnic enclave industrial districts in the North. This was the first election after the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and it was the last election in which New York had the most votes in the electoral college. After the 1970 census, California gained the most electoral votes and has remained the most populous state since then, in the election of 1964, incumbent Democrat Lyndon B. Johnson won the largest popular vote landslide in U. S. Presidential election history over Republican Barry Goldwater, despite making significant achievements, his popular support would be short-lived. At the same time, the country endured large-scale race riots in the streets of its cities, along with a generational revolt of young people. The most important reason for the decline of President Johnsons popularity was the Vietnam War. By late 1967, over 500,000 American soldiers were fighting in Vietnam, draftees made up 42 percent of the military in Vietnam, but suffered 58% of the casualties as nearly 1000 Americans a month were killed and many more were injured. Though a U. S. military victory, Tet led many Americans to ponder whether the war was winnable or worth it, in addition, voters felt they could not trust their governments assessment and reporting of the war effort. The Pentagon called for sending several hundred thousand soldiers to Vietnam. The Secret Service also prevented Johnson from appearing at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Vice President Hubert Humphrey Senator Robert F. Kennedy from New York Senator Eugene McCarthy from Minnesota Senator George McGovern from South Dakota President Lyndon B. As a result, it was assumed when 1968 began that President Johnson would run for another term. Despite growing opposition to Johnsons policies in Vietnam, it appeared that no prominent Democratic candidate would run against a president of his own party. Even Senator Robert F. Kennedy from New York, a critic of Johnsons policies with a large base of support

United States presidential election, 1968
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All 538 electoral votes of the Electoral College 270 electoral votes needed to win
United States presidential election, 1968
United States presidential election, 1968
United States presidential election, 1968
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Senator Robert F. Kennedy from New York (Assassinated June 6, 1968)

23.
Richard Nixon
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Richard Milhous Nixon was an American politician who served as the 37th President of the United States from 1969 until 1974, when he became the only U. S. president to resign from office. He had previously served as a U. S, Representative and Senator from California and as the 36th Vice President of the United States from 1953 to 1961 under the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower. Nixon was born in Yorba Linda, California, after completing his undergraduate studies at Whittier College, he graduated from Duke University School of Law in 1937 and returned to California to practice law. He and his wife Pat moved to Washington in 1942 to work for the federal government and he subsequently served on active duty in the U. S. Navy Reserve during World War II. Nixon was elected to the House of Representatives in 1946 and to the Senate in 1950 and his pursuit of the Hiss Case established his reputation as a leading anti-communist, and elevated him to national prominence. He was the mate of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Republican Party presidential nominee in the 1952 election. Nixon served for eight years as vice president and he waged an unsuccessful presidential campaign in 1960, narrowly losing to John F. Kennedy, and lost a race for Governor of California to Pat Brown in 1962. In 1968, he ran for the presidency again and was elected by defeating incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey, Nixon ended American involvement in the war in Vietnam in 1973 and brought the American POWs home, and ended the military draft. His administration generally transferred power from Washington D. C. to the states and he imposed wage and price controls for a period of ninety days, enforced desegregation of Southern schools and established the Environmental Protection Agency. Nixon also presided over the Apollo 11 moon landing, which signaled the end of the moon race and he was reelected in one of the largest electoral landslides in U. S. history in 1972, when he defeated George McGovern. The year 1973 saw an Arab oil embargo, gasoline rationing, the scandal escalated, costing Nixon much of his political support, and on August 9,1974, he resigned in the face of almost certain impeachment and removal from office. After his resignation, he was issued a pardon by his successor, in retirement, Nixons work writing several books and undertaking of many foreign trips helped to rehabilitate his image. He suffered a stroke on April 18,1994. Richard Milhous Nixon was born on January 9,1913 in Yorba Linda, California and his parents were Hannah Nixon and Francis A. Nixon. His mother was a Quaker and his father converted from Methodism to the Quaker faith, Nixons upbringing was marked by evangelical Quaker observances of the time, such as refraining from alcohol, dancing, and swearing. Nixon had four brothers, Harold, Donald, Arthur, four of the five Nixon boys were named after kings who had ruled in historical or legendary England, Richard, for example, was named after Richard the Lionheart. Nixons early life was marked by hardship, and he quoted a saying of Eisenhower to describe his boyhood, We were poor. The Nixon family ranch failed in 1922, and the moved to Whittier

Richard Nixon
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Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon
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The infant Richard stands outside the Nixons' Yorba Linda Home (early 1914), looking toward what is today the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum
Richard Nixon
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Nixon (second from right) makes his newspaper debut in 1916, contributing five cents to a fund for war orphans. Donald is to the left of his brother.
Richard Nixon
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Nixon at Whittier High School in 1930.

24.
Donald Trump
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Donald John Trump is the 45th and current President of the United States. Prior to entering politics he was a businessman and television personality, Trump was born and raised in Queens, New York City, and earned an economics degree from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. He then took charge of The Trump Organization, the estate and construction firm founded by his paternal grandmother, which he ran for four. During his real career, Trump has built, renovated, and managed numerous office towers, hotels, casinos. Besides real estate, he started several ventures and has lent the use of his name for the branding of various products. He owned the Miss USA and Miss Universe pageants from 1996 to 2015, and he hosted The Apprentice, as of 2017, Forbes listed him as the 544th wealthiest person in the world with a net worth of $3.5 billion. Trump first publicly expressed interest in running for office in 1987. He won two Reform Party presidential primaries in 2000, but withdrew his candidacy early on, in June 2015, he launched his campaign for the 2016 presidential election and quickly emerged as the front-runner among 17 candidates in the Republican primaries. His final opponents suspended their campaigns in May 2016, and in July he was nominated at the Republican National Convention along with Indiana governor Mike Pence as his running mate. His campaign received unprecedented media coverage and international attention, many of the statements he made at rallies, in interviews, or on social media were controversial or false. Trump won the election on November 8,2016, in a surprise victory against Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton. His political positions have been described by scholars and commentators as populist, protectionist, Trump was born on June 14,1946 at the Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, Queens, New York City. He was the fourth of five born to Frederick Christ Fred Trump. His siblings are Maryanne, Fred Jr. Elizabeth, and Robert, Trumps ancestors originated from the village of Kallstadt, Palatinate, Germany on his fathers side, and from the Outer Hebrides isles of Scotland on his mothers side. All his grandparents, and his mother, were born in Europe and his mothers grandfather was also christened Donald. On a visit to his village, he met Elisabeth Christ. He died from the flu pandemic of 1918 and Elizabeth incorporated the family real estate business, Elizabeth Trump and Son, which would later become The Trump Organization. Trumps father Fred was born in the Bronx, and worked with his mother since he was 15 as a real estate developer, primarily in the New York boroughs of Queens and he eventually built and sold thousands of houses, barracks and apartments

25.
Lewis Wolfley
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Lewis Wolfley was an American civil engineer who served as the eighth Governor of Arizona Territory. He is commonly regarded as the first territorial governor to be a resident of Arizona at the time of his appointment and was the only bachelor to hold the position, Wolfleys political career was marred by his almost complete lack of political skill. Much of his time as governor was spent in political infighting, Wolfley was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to Lewis and Elanor Wolfley. When he was a child, his father died, and Wolfley grew up near the border of Ohio. His mothers family, the Ewings of Ohio, arranged for his education included the study of civil engineering. As a young man he worked for railroads operating in Iowa, during the American Civil War, Wolfley became a member of the Union Armys 3rd Kentucky Cavalry. He served with distinction, earning the nickname Shermans Fighting Major, Wolfley left the Army with the rank of lieutenant colonel and became a federal revenue officer in New Orleans. In 1872 Wolfley was mining in Colorado, and he worked in the District of Columbia before moving to Arizona Territory in the early 1880s. In Arizona he worked as an engineer performing surveying work on public lands. He gained a reputation as a person but due to the large amount of time spent working in the field was not well known. When Republican President Benjamin Harrison took office, he desired to replace Democratic Governor C. Meyer Zulick with a member of his own political party, newspaper reports indicated fifteen to sixteen serious candidates were considered for the post, among them being former Governor Anson P. K. Safford and Territorial Delegate Curtis C, Wolfley applied for the position directly to Harrison two days after the presidential inauguration. Wolfley supporters included Generals William T. Sherman, Nelson A. Miles, senator John Sherman, Russell A. Alger, James G. Blaine, and Secretary of the Interior John W. Noble. Opposition to his nomination came from U. S, senator J. Donald Cameron of Pennsylvania. The senators nephew, Brewster Cameron of the San Rafael Cattle Company, had a previous billing dispute with Wolfley over a job the nominee had done for the Arizona cattleman. Despite the opposition, Wolfley received unanimous confirmation from the U. S. Senate on March 28 and was sworn in as Governor of Arizona Territory on April 8,1889, the first issue that Wolfley faced as Governor was dealing with appointment of territorial officers. Democratic Governor Zulick, as part of his duties, had submitted a full slate of nominations to the 15th Arizona Territorial Legislature. The Republican controlled legislature rejected Zulicks nominations and postponed adjournment after learning of Wolfleys nomination in order to allow the new governor to appoint his own candidates, the territorial governments ability to function was severely impacted by the two sets of territorial officials

26.
Newseum
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The modern seven-level,250, 000-square-foot museum is located at 555 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, in Washington, D. C. features 15 theaters and 15 galleries. The Newseums Berlin Wall Gallery includes the largest display of sections of the Berlin Wall outside of Germany, the Todays Front Pages Gallery presents daily front pages from more than 80 international newspapers. Other galleries present topics including the First Amendment, world press freedom, news history, the September 11 attacks, and the history of the Internet, TV, and radio. It opened at its first location in Rosslyn, Virginia, on April 18,1997 and its mission is to promote, explain and defend free expression and the five freedoms of the First Amendment, religion, speech, press, assembly and petition. The new Newseum has become one of Washingtons most popular destinations, attracting more than 815,000 visitors a year, the adult admission fee is $24.95 plus tax. Despite such high admission fees, however, it has seen years of financial losses, in 2013, the museum lost more than $4 million on revenue of $63 million. In 2000, Freedom Forum decided to move the Newseum from its location in Arlington, Virginia, across the Potomac River to downtown Washington, the original Newseum was closed on March 3,2002, to allow its staff to concentrate on building the new, larger museum. The new museum, built at a cost of $450 million, Tim Russert, a Newseum trustee, said, The Newseum made a pretty good impression in Arlington, but at your new location on Pennsylvania Avenue, you will make an indelible mark. The newest Newseum on Pennsylvania Avenue shares a prime block adjacent to the Canadian Embassy and it features the 45 words of the First Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, etched into a four story tall stone panel facing Pennsylvania Avenue. One feature carried over from the prior Arlington site was the Journalists Memorial and it is updated and rededicated every year. The museum website is updated daily with images and PDF versions of newspaper front pages from around the world, images are replaced daily, but an archive of front pages from notable events since 2001 is also available. Hard copies of selected front pages, including one from every U. S. state and Washington, D. C. are displayed in galleries within the museum, unlike its original museum in Arlington, the new Newseum charges admission fees to the general public. Jerry Frieheim, a 1956 graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, was the first executive director of the Newseum and claims to have coined the name. Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School students are admitted to the Newseum free of charge, as Smiths son, the structural engineer for this project was Leslie E. Robertson Associates. A curving glass memorial to slain journalists is located above the ground floor, showcase environments throughout the museum are climate controlled by four microclimate control devices. These units provide a flow of humidified air to the cases through a system of distribution pipes, aBCs This Week began broadcasting from a new studio in the Newseum on April 20,2008, with George Stephanopoulos as host. ABC moved This Week back to its Washington, D. C. bureau in June 2013 citing the networks infrequent use of the Newseum studio compared to the cost of operating and maintaining a studio there. The studio was home to Al Jazeera Americas Washington, D. C. bureau which also had editing facilities

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The original Newseum in Arlington, now home to an art gallery and theater.
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Aerial view of the Newseum
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Each day's newspaper front pages from around the world are put on display outside the Newseum.

27.
MMAjunkie.com
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MMAjunkie is a news website that covers the sport of mixed martial arts. MMAjunkie is owned by Gannett Company, a variety of guest columnists and bloggers have been featured such as Ryan Bader, C. B. Dollaway and Brendan Schaub. A parallel Spanish version of the website is also available, MMAjunkie Radio is a weekly Internet radio show broadcast from Las Vegas, Nevada. MMAjunkie Radio resulted from the acquisition and re-branding of TAGG Radio, the live Internet radio show and podcast was renamed MMAjunkie Radio in early 2009. Hosted by Gorgeous George Garcia, Brian Goze Garcia and MMAjunkie lead staff reporter John Morgan, the two-hour show is a guest-driven program that features some of the most prominent fighters, trainers, promoters and officials in the sport. Additionally, Morgan and other members of the MMAjunkie editorial team frequently discuss, upon its initial launch, TAGG Radio became the first radio show co-hosted by an active MMA fighter, though Frank Trigg ultimately had to resign his post due to his UFC contract stipulations. Trainer Marc Laimon has since become a frequent co-host, and veteran fighter Don Frye is a contributor with his humorous Don Frye-days personal advice segments. MMAjunkie MMAjunkie Forums MMAjunkie Radio MMAjunkie - Spanish version

MMAjunkie.com
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MMAjunkie.com

28.
Abilene Reporter-News
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Abilene Reporter-News is a daily newspaper based in Abilene, Texas, US. The newspaper started publishing as the weekly Abilene Reporter, helmed by Charles Edwin Gilbert on June 17,1881 and it is hence the oldest continuous business in the city. It became a newspaper in 1885. Two months after starting the paper, a fire destroyed several buildings in Abilene and he rode the train 21 miles east to Baird and used a borrowed printing press to produce an extra edition on the fire. Two other Abilene papers began publication in the 1880s, the newspaper, owned in the early 1920s by Bernard Hanks, became one of the two original flagships of the Harte-Hanks newspaper chain in 1924. In 1937, the company merged its morning paper, the Morning News, the newspaper published morning and evening editions into the 1950s. The E. W. Scripps Company bought the newspaper, along with other Texas-based Harte-Hanks papers, the company spun out its newspaper assets into Journal Media Group in April 2015

Abilene Reporter-News
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Abilene Reporter-News downtown office

29.
Argus Leader
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The Argus Leader is the daily newspaper of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. It is South Dakotas largest newspaper by circulation, despite dramatically falling numbers, the Argus Leader is South Dakotas largest newspaper in circulation. The weekday circulation for the newspaper as of September 30,2007 was 48,466 down from 53,929 in 2006, the Sunday edition is also in decline. From July to September 2007 circulation of the Sunday edition fell from 69,767 to 67,943, the newspaper and websites most recent style change happened in September 2006. The new goal is to bring more local coverage and allow readers to voice their opinions in an open format, to do this a new section of the paper was created called Voices in conjunction with the online Your Voice section. Along with the newspaper the Argus Leader owns smaller local papers in the region. Brandon Valley Challenger Dell Rapids Tribune The newspaper also publishes a weekly, the Sioux Falls Business Journal. List of newspapers in South Dakota Argus Leader website Official mobile website Brandon Valley Challenger Dell Rapids Tribune Sioux Falls Business Journal

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The October 22, 2012 front page of the Argus Leader

30.
Asheville Citizen-Times
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The Asheville Citizen-Times is a major daily newspaper of Asheville, North Carolina. It was formed in 1991 as a result of a merger of the morning Asheville Citizen, founded in 1870 as a weekly, the Citizen became a daily newspaper in 1885. Writers Thomas Wolfe, O. Henry, both buried in Asheville, and F. Scott Fitzgerald, a visitor of Asheville. In 1930 the Citizen came under common ownership with the Times, the latter paper merged with a short-lived rival, the Asheville Evening News, to form the Asheville Gazette-News and was renamed The Asheville Times by new owner Charles A. Webb. In 1954, the Citizen-Times was purchased by the Greenville News-Piedmont Company, in 1968 Greenville News-Piedmont merged with Southern Broadcasting Corporation to form Multimedia. In 1995, Multimedia was acquired by Gannett, in April 1997, the Citizen-Times became the first daily newspaper in Western North Carolina to launch a website, the site now receives tens of thousands of hits a day. In Jan 2009, the press was shut down and shortly after sold off as scrap metal, now the Citizen-Times is printed in Greenville, South Carolina, alongside The Greenville News and shipped to a distribution center. Citizen-Times official site Official mobile website Gannett Company, Inc. official site Asheville Citizen-Times article on AshevilleNow. com Other Newspapers and Publications in Asheville

31.
The Burlington Free Press
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Burlington Free Press is a daily newspaper based in Burlington, Vermont, United States. With a circulation of about 20,166 daily and 27,830 on Sundays, the longtime editor Michael Townsend accepted early voluntary retirement in October 2015. The newspaper has been hit by waves of layoffs over the past several years, international news is usually reprinted stories supplied by the Associated Press and Reuters news services. Burlington Free Press originally began as the Free Press Weekly, publishing its first issue in 1827, with use of the telegraph, the newspaper became an evening daily in 1848, although it did not publish a Sunday newspaper until 1965. With the purchase of the Burlington Times in 1868, the Free Press Association was founded, in 1882 the evening edition was canceled due to poor sales and an influx of morning edition readers. In 1961 a new corporation, Free Press Association, Inc. was organized by high-positioned Free Press personnel who purchased it from 50 stockholders, in 1971 the Free Press changed hands, merging with the Public Opinion and becoming a part of the Gannett Company. In July 2008, the announced they would raise the retail price of their newspapers, except on Sundays. This did not affect the price for subscribers, in December 2008, the Gannett Company announced a company-wide workforce reduction of ten percent. Burlington Free Press laid off six of its newsroom staff, in April 2012, the Society of Professional Journalists awarded its 2011 Sigma Delta Chi Awards for excellence in journalism, and the Burlington Free Press was on the list twice. Burlington Free Press reporter Candace Page won for her story, Hard Lessons of the Tweed in the Features Reporting category for newspapers with a less than 50,000. The Free Press staff was honored in the online deadline-reporting category for the stories, videos, included in the awards submission were tweets, videos and online stories from the first report of gun shots in City Hall Park to the tension between police and protesters later that evening. In July 2012, the Burlington Free Press won two awards from the Associated Press Media Editors association. ”DIGITAL STORYTELLING AND REPORTING, For breaking news coverage of the fatal Occupy Burlington shooting in City Hall Park in November. In October 2012, Burlington Free Press announced plans to sell seven of its 12 properties in downtown Burlington, the paper plans to keep its printing press and mail room, but is selling office space. In June 2013, the Burlington Free Press won a national Edward R. Murrow Award for excellence in reporting for coverage of a dramatic rescue on the Browns River in Jericho last year. Radio Television Digital News Association judges selected Burlington Free Press Multimedia Editor Ryan Mercers video for recognition in the breaking-news category, the associations chairman said the field of award competitors this year was the best the organization had seen. The award marks the first national citation for the Burlington Free Press from the RTDNA, no other Vermont media received a national Murrow Award. The paper also was awarded five regional Murrow Awards - four for video, in August 2013, Burlington Free Press announced that it had cut 13 jobs across the papers departments, but did not release information on what positions had been eliminated. In December 2013, the Burlington Free Press won nine awards from the Vermont Press Association, including general excellence, best website and several writing

The Burlington Free Press
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Type

32.
Carlsbad Current-Argus
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The Carlsbad Current-Argus is a newspaper in Carlsbad, New Mexico, United States. It has been published since 1889, the newspaper, printed in a broadsheet format, is published daily except Mondays. The Current-Argus is the result of a merger of the now-defunct Carlsbad Current and it was described in 1953 as conservative. The paper was owned by MediaNews and part of the Digital First Media company, the Current-Argus was a part of the Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnership, a 2003 joint venture between Gannett and MediaNews Group. In 2015, Gannett acquired full ownership of the Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnership, the newspaper publishes two sections, A, local news, the Little-Argus, regional and state news, opinions and letters to the editor, wire service articles, and weather. B, local sports, national sports, classified ads, legal notices, comics, additionally, special sections appear throughout the week, Sunday, Sunday Living features stories spotlighting a residents hobby, history, or the like. Saturday, Vamonos is an entertainment section that is also inserted into the Ruidoso News. A subscription-based web site contains all the articles that are published in the print edition. When local breaking news occurs, a story about the event is usually posted. Historical and additional photos from stories are present in an online gallery, local blogs written by residents have also been hosted, with topics ranging from caving to politics to books. The Current-Argus also produces online web video features highlighting special events and sports around town

33.
The Cincinnati Enquirer
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The Cincinnati Enquirer is a morning daily newspaper published by Gannett Company in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. The Enquirer has the highest circulation of any print publication in the Cincinnati metropolitan area, a daily local edition for Northern Kentucky is published as The Kentucky Enquirer. The Enquirer is available online at the Cincinnati. com website, the Enquirer is regarded as a conservative, Republican-leaning newspaper, in contrast to The Cincinnati Post, a former competing daily. From 1920 to 2012, the board endorsed every Republican candidate for United States president. By contrast, the current editorial board claims to take a pragmatic editorial stance, according to editor Peter Bhatia, It is made up of pragmatic, solution-driven members who, frankly, don’t have much use for extreme ideologies from the right or the left. The board’s mantra in our editorials has been about problem-solving and improving the quality of life for everyone in greater Cincinnati, on September 24,2016, the Enquirer endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, the first endorsement of a Democrat for president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916. The Kentucky Enquirer consists of an additional section wrapped around the Cincinnati Enquirer, the front page is remade from the Ohio edition, although it may contain similar elements. Since September 2015, the Enquirer and local Fox affiliate WXIX-TV have partnered on news gathering and have shared news coverage and video among the paper, broadcasts, the Enquirers predecessor was the Phoenix, edited by Moses Dawson as early as 1828. It later became the Commercial Advertiser and in 1838 the Cincinnati Advertiser, by the time John and Charles Brough purchased it and renamed it the Daily Cincinnati Enquirer, it was considered a newspaper of record for the city. The Enquirers first issue, on April 10,1841, consisted of just four pages of squint-inducing text that was, at times and it declared its staunch support for the Democratic Party, in contrast to the three Whig papers and two ostensibly independent papers then in circulation. A weekly digest edition for regional farmers, the Weekly Cincinnati Enquirer, began publishing on April 14 and would continue until November 25,1843, in November 1843, the Enquirer merged with the Daily Morning Message to become the Enquirer and Message. In January 1845, the dropped the Message name, becoming The Cincinnati Daily Enquirer. Finally, in May 1849, the paper became The Cincinnati Enquirer, on April 20,1848, the Enquirer became one of the first newspapers in the United States to publish a Sunday edition. In 1844, James J. Faran took an interest in the Enquirer, in 1848, Washington McLean and his brother S. B. Wiley McLean acquired an interest in the Enquirer. On March 22,1866, a gas leak caused Pikes Opera House to explode, a competitor, the Cincinnati Daily Times, allowed the Enquirer to print on its presses in the wake of the disaster. As a result, the Enquirer missed only one day of publication, however, archives of the papers first 25 years were lost. Washington McLean was a leading Copperhead whose editorial policies led to the suppression of the paper by the United States government during the Civil War, after the war, McLean pursued an anti-Republican stance. One of his star writers was Lafcadio Hearn, who wrote for the paper from 1872 to 1875, James W. Faulkner served as the papers political correspondent, covering the Ohio State Legislature and Statehouse, from 1887 until his death in 1923

34.
The Clarion-Ledger
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The Clarion-Ledger is an American Pulitzer Prize-winning daily newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi. It is the second oldest company in the state of Mississippi and is one of only a few newspapers in the nation continues to circulate statewide. It is a division of Gannett River States Publishing Corporation. The paper traces its roots to The Eastern Clarion, founded in Jasper County, Mississippi, later that year, it was sold and moved to Meridian, Mississippi. After the American Civil War, it was moved to Jackson and it soon became known as The Clarion. Four employees who were displaced by the merger founded their own newspaper, The Jackson Evening Post, in 1888, The Clarion merged with the State Ledger and became known as the Daily Clarion-Ledger. In 1907, Fred Sullens purchased an interest in the competing The Jackson Evening Post and it still remained an evening newspaper. Thomas and Robert Hederman bought the Daily Clarion-Ledger in 1920 and dropped Daily from its masthead, on August 24,1937, The Clarion-Ledger and Jackson Daily News incorporated under a charter issued to Mississippi Publishers Corporation for the purpose of selling joint advertising. The Hederman family now owned both papers and consolidated the two newspaper plants, in 1982, the Hedermans sold the Clarion-Ledger and Daily News to Gannett, ending 60 years of family ownership. Gannett merged the two papers into a morning paper under the Clarion-Ledger masthead, with the Clarion-Ledger incorporating the best features of the Daily News. The purchase of both papers by Gannett essentially created a newspaper monopoly in Central Mississippi, which still exists. Historically, both newspapers—The Clarion-Ledger and the Jackson Daily News—were openly and unashamedly racist, even by Deep South standards, if every negro in Mississippi was a class graduate of Harvard, and had been elected class orator. He would not be as well fitted to exercise the rights of suffrage as the Anglo-Saxon farm laborer, when 200,000 people marched on Washington in 1963 to urge jobs and freedom for black people and Martin Luther King, Jr. At the time, longstanding state policy forbade state collegiate athletic teams from playing in integrated events, the paper often referred to civil rights activists as communists and chimpanzees. The papers racism was so virulent that it prompted some in the African-American community to call it The Klan-Ledger, when violence, aided by such rabble rousing, took place in Mississippi, the paper sought to put the blame somewhere else. In the mid-1970s, Rea S. Hederman, the generation of his family to run the paper. Hederman expanded the staff and news budget, editors began to pursue promising young reporters, even from other states. To help rehabilitate the papers image among blacks, who became a majority of Jacksons population

The Clarion-Ledger
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The Clarion-Ledger
The Clarion-Ledger
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The Clarion-Ledger headquarters in 1912

35.
The Commercial Appeal
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The Commercial Appeal is a daily newspaper of Memphis, Tennessee, and its surrounding metropolitan area. It is owned by the Gannett Company, its owner, The E. W. Scripps Company, also owned the former afternoon paper, the Memphis Press-Scimitar. The 2016 purchase by Gannett of Journal Media Group effectively gave it control of the two papers in western and central Tennessee, uniting the Commercial Appeal with Nashvilles The Tennessean. The Commercial Appeal is a morning paper. It is distributed primarily in Greater Memphis, including Shelby, Fayette, and Tipton counties in Tennessee and DeSoto, Tate and these are the contiguous counties to the city of Memphis. In 1994, The Commercial Appeal won a Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning by Michael Ramirez, the papers name comes from a 19th-century merger between two predecessors, the Memphis Commercial and the Appeal. The Appeal had a history during the American Civil War. On June 6,1862, the presses and plates were loaded into a boxcar and moved to Grenada, the press was hidden and saved, and publication resumed in Memphis, using it, on November 5,1865. Another early paper, The Avalanche, was incorporated later in the 19th century, the paper is properly The Commercial Appeal and not the Memphis Commercial Appeal as it is often called, although the predecessor Appeal was formally the Memphis Daily Appeal. The paper in the 1940s had a well known columnist Paul Flowers who wrote the Greenhouse column, the Commercial Appeal had a mixed record on civil rights. Despite its Confederate background the paper won a Pulitzer Prize in 1923 for its coverage, from 1916 to 1968, the paper published a cartoon called Hambones Meditations. The cartoon featured a man, Hambone, that many African Americans came to regard as a racist caricature. In 1917, the published the scheduled time and place for the upcoming Lynching of Ell Persons. During the Civil Rights Movement, the paper generally avoided coverage and it did take a stance against pro-segregation rioters during the Ole Miss riot of 1962. However, its owner, Scripps-Howard, exerted a generally conservative, the paper opposed the Memphis sanitation strike, portraying both labor organizers and Martin Luther King Jr. as outside meddlers. This manipulation of the Commercial Appeal was part of the FBIs counterintelligence program against black nationalists in the late 1960s, in the fall of 2007, the Appeal touched off a controversial policy that would have linked specific stories and specific advertisers. The proposal was greeted by outrage among media analysts, so the authors of the so-called monetization memo-- the Appeals editor, at the end of 2008, The Commercial Appeal posted a controversial database listing Tennessee residents with permits to carry handguns. The database is a record in Tennessee but had not been posted online

The Commercial Appeal
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The July 27, 2005 front page of The Commercial Appeal
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Ad copy agents take orders for advertisements in the Old Commercial Appeal Building, 495 Union Avenue, Memphis, in 1961.

36.
The Courier-Journal
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The Courier-Journal, locally called The Courier or The C-J, is the main newspaper for the city of Louisville, Kentucky, United States. According to the 1999 Editor & Publisher International Yearbook, the paper is the 48th-largest daily paper in the U. S. the Courier-Journal was created from the merger of several newspapers introduced in Kentucky in the 19th century. Pioneer paper The Focus of Politics, Commerce and Literature, was founded in 1826 in Louisville when the city was a settlement of less than 7,000 individuals. In 1830 a new newspaper, The Louisville Daily Journal, began distribution in the city and, in 1832, absorbed The Focus of Politics, Commerce and Literature. The Journal was an organ of the Whig Party, founded and edited by George D. Prentice, Prentice would edit the Journal for more than 40 years. In 1844, another newspaper, the Louisville Morning Courier was founded in Louisville by Walter Newman Haldeman, the Courier was suppressed by the Union and had to move to Nashville, but returned to Louisville after the war. In 1868, an ailing Prentice persuaded the 28-year-old Henry Watterson to come edit for the Journal, during secret negotiations in 1868, The Journal and the Courier merged and the first edition of The Courier-Journal was delivered to Louisvillians on Sunday morning, November 8,1868. Henry Watterson, the son of a Tennessee congressman, had written for Harpers Magazine and he became nationally known for his work as The Courier-Journal emerged as the regions leading paper. He supported the Democratic Party and pushed for the industrialization of Kentucky and he attracted controversy for attempting to prove that Christopher Marlowe had actually written the works of Shakespeare. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1917 for editorials demanding the United States enter World War I, the Courier-Journal founded a companion afternoon edition of the paper, The Louisville Times, in May 1884. In 1896, Watterson and Haldeman opposed Democratic presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan over his support of Free Silver coinage and this unpopular decision upset readers and advertisers, many of whom pulled their support for The Courier-Journal. Kentucky voted for the Republican candidate in 1896, the first time in state history, only the popularity of The Louisville Times, which had no strong editorial reputation, saved the newspaper company from bankruptcy. The Courier supported Bryan in future elections, Haldeman had owned the papers until his death in 1902, and by 1917 they were owned by his son, William, and Henry Watterson. On August 8,1918, Robert Worth Bingham purchased two-thirds interest in the newspapers, the liberal Bingham clashed with longtime editor Watterson, who remained on board, but was in the twilight of his career. Wattersons editorials opposing the League of Nations appeared alongside Binghams favoring it, I have always regarded the newspapers owned by me as a public trust and have endeavored so to conduct them as to render the greatest public service. As publisher, Bingham set the tone for his editorial pages, and pushed for improved education, support of African Americans. During Barry Bingham, Sr. s tenure, the paper was considered Kentuckys Newspaper of Record, in 1971, Barry Bingham, Jr. succeeded his father as the newspapers editor and publisher. The Binghams were well-liked owners popularly credited with being more concerned with publishing quality journalism than making heavy profits, Barry Bingham Jr. sought to free the papers from conflicts of interests, and through The Louisville Times, experimented with new ideas such as signed editorials

The Courier-Journal
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The July 27, 2005 front page of The Courier-Journal
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Editorial staff of The Courier-Journal, 1868.
The Courier-Journal
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Courier-Journal offices in downtown Louisville, built during the Bingham era

37.
The Daily Advertiser (Lafayette)
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The Daily Advertiser is a Gannett daily newspaper based in Lafayette, the fourth-largest city in the U. S. state of Louisiana. The Daily Advertiser covers international, national, state, and local news in the six parishes of Lafayette, Acadia, Iberia, St. Landry, St. Martin, the publication circulates 28,400 copies on weekdays. Its ranks 234 out of 1,410 newspapers in the United States, the circulation area is approximately 27 percent nonwhite, the nonwhite employees of the newspaper totaled approximately 17 percent in 2005. The Daily Advertiser was co-founded as the Weekly Advertiser in 1865 by a Confederate States Army veteran, bailey, who subsequently served from 1884 to 1892 as mayor of his native Lafayette. Louisiana journalist Robert Angers worked at times for The Daily Advertiser, in 1998, The Daily Advertiser bought the local alternative weekly, the Times of Acadiana

38.
The Daily Times (Salisbury)
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The Daily Times is a morning daily English-language publication based in Salisbury, Maryland. It has been a Gannett publication since 2002, the Daily Times was first owned by the Truitt family of Salisbury, Maryland. It was sold to Brush-Moore Newspapers of Canton, Ohio in 1937,30 years later, Brush-Moore was sold to Thomson Newspapers of Toronto, Gannett bought the paper from Thomson in 2000. The paper began publication in 1886 as The Wicomico News, a weekly, on December 3,1923, it became a daily and became The Evening Times and later The Salisbury Times, the Shoremans Daily. It changed its Sunday name to The Sunday Times on Oct.22,1967 to reflect its Sunday publication and it became a morning publication on October 2,1989. Later, it dropped the name on Sunday and printed seven days a week under the name of The Daily Times, the paper was located on Main St. in downtown Salisbury, Maryland, for years, at a site that later became a mens apparel store. A new building was constructed on what was Upton St. across from the Peninsula General Medical Center, the papers home was on a site that had been the old Wicomico High School and before that in the 1860s, a Union encampment during the Civil War. The school was demolished to build a modern newspaper plant built in 1957, photos of the open house on Upton Street are in the Nabbs Research Center at Salisbury University, along with photographs and several other items from the paper. Due to the move,17 production jobs were eliminated and its first editor was Charles J. Truitt, who owned the paper with his cousin, Alfred Truitt. Editors followed included, Oscar L. Morris, Richard L. Moore, Mel Toadvine, Gary Grossman, Greg Bassett, ted Shockley became the executive editor in May 2015. Alfred Truitt was its first publisher, others who followed included Thomas D. Irvin, Dean Farmer, and Edward Ed White, Terry Hopkins, Keith Blevins, Larry Jock, Joni Silverstein, Rick Jensen, Greg Bassett and Tom Claybaugh. Bill Janus was named publisher in 2015, in addition to the daily paper, special and seasonal publications and special inserts, The Daily Times is responsible for the publication of an assortment of associated regional weekly papers. The Times and its associated broadsheets and weekly tabloids were branded the Strategic Marketing Group in 2001, todays The Daily Times front page at the Newseum website

The Daily Times (Salisbury)
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The paper's April 11, 2010 front page

39.
Democrat and Chronicle
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The Democrat and Chronicle is a daily newspaper serving the greater Rochester, New York area. Located at 245 East Main Street in downtown Rochester, the Democrat, the papers production facility is located in the town of Greece. The Democrat and Chronicle is Rochesters only daily circulated newspaper, founded in 1833 as The Balance, the paper eventually became known as the Daily Democrat. The Daily Democrat merged with local paper, the Chronicle, in 1870, to become known as the Democrat. The paper was purchased by Gannett in 1928, from 1928 to 1985, the Democrat and Chronicle was Gannetts flagship paper, and Gannetts corporate headquarters were located in the Democrat and Chronicle building. Gannett moved its headquarters to Tysons Corner, Virginia, home of USA Today, at 153,350 square feet, the former headquarters in the Gannett building was considerably larger than the current headquarters, which is 42,000 square feet. With the move came new branding as D&C Digital emphasizing focus on the outlets online, in 2010, The Democrat and Chronicle ranked number one among US newspapers in market penetration, the percentage of readers in a metro area who read in print or online. The Democrat and Chronicle held that top spot for several years, according to the official site, the Democrat and Chronicle is delivered to over 170,000 homes,1300 retail stores and over 1000 news racks. Earl Caldwell Marie D. De Jesus Arch Merrill Manuel Rivera-Ortiz Pam Sherman, aka The Suburban Outlaw Michael Walsh The Democrat and Chronicle prices are, $1 daily, may be higher outside Monroe & adjacent counties. Official Site Gannett Official Site 1923 Paper detailing opening of old Pre-Gannett building formerly on Main Street Bridge

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Democrat and Chronicle

40.
The Des Moines Register
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The Des Moines Register is the daily morning newspaper of Des Moines, Iowa. A separate edition of the Register is sold throughout much of Iowa, the first newspaper in Des Moines, the Iowa Star, was founded in 1849. In 1855, the Iowa Citizen began publication, it was renamed the Iowa State Register in 1860, in 1902, the Register merged with the Des Moines Leader, a descendant of the Star, to become the Des Moines Register and Leader. In 1903, Des Moines banker Gardner Cowles, Sr. purchased the Register and Leader, under the ownership of the Cowles family, the Register became Iowas largest and most influential newspaper, eventually adopting the slogan The Newspaper Iowa Depends Upon. Newspapers were distributed to all four corners of the state by train, during the 1960s, circulation of the Register peaked at nearly 250,000 for the daily edition and 500,000 for the Sunday edition–more than the population of Des Moines at the time. In 1935, the Register & Tribune Company founded radio station KRNT-AM, named after the newspapers nickname, the R n T. In 1955, the company, renamed Cowles Communications some years earlier, founded Des Moines third television station, KRNT-TV, Cowles eventually acquired other newspapers, radio stations and television stations, but almost all of them were sold to other companies by 1985. In 1943, the Register became the first newspaper to sponsor a statewide opinion poll when it introduced the Iowa Poll, Sports coverage was increased under sports editor Garner Sec Taylor – for whom Sec Taylor Field at Principal Park is named – in the 1920s. For many years the Register printed its sports sections on peach-colored paper, another Register tradition – the sponsorship of RAGBRAI – began in 1973 when writer John Karras challenged columnist Donald Kaul to do a border-to-border bicycle ride across Iowa. The liberal-leaning editorial page has brought Donald Kaul back for Sunday opinion columns, other local columns have faded and given way to Gannett-distributed material. In 1985, faced with declining circulation and revenues, the Cowles family sold off its various properties to different owners, at the time of sale, only The New York Times had won more Pulitzer Prizes for national reporting. Many of the Registers news stories and editorials focus on Des Moines, the Register opened a new printing and distribution facility on the south side of Des Moines in 2000. The news & advertising offices remained in downtown Des Moines, the old building was sold in late 2014 and will be redeveloped into a combination of apartments and retail space. In the three decades before the Cowles family acquired the Register in 1903, the Register was a voice of pragmatic conservatism. However, Garner Cowles Sr. who served as a Republican in the Iowa General Assembly and was a delegate to the 1916 Republican National Convention, was an advocate of progressive Republicanism. The new owners presented a variety of viewpoints, including Darling cartoons that frequently made fun of progressive politicians, Garner Cowles Sr. served in the administration of President Herbert Hoover. The publishers strongly supported Republican Wendell Willkies 1940 presidential campaign against Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt, the newspaper also supported Republican Dwight Eisenhowers campaigns for the Republican nomination and general election in 1952, and again in 1956. Although the Register endorsed presidential candidates Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, Hubert Humphrey in 1968, the paper was a severe critic of George W. Bushs warrantless wiretapping strategy, claiming that in doing so, President Bush has declared war on the American people

The Des Moines Register

41.
Detroit Free Press
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The Detroit Free Press is the largest daily newspaper in Detroit, Michigan, USA. The Sunday edition is entitled the Sunday Free Press and it is sometimes informally referred to as the Freep. It primarily serves Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Livingston, Washtenaw, the Free Press is also the largest city newspaper owned by Gannett, which also publishes USA Today. The Free Press has received ten Pulitzer Prizes and four Emmy Awards and its motto is On Guard Since 1831. The newspaper was begun by John R. Williams and his uncle, Joseph Campau, the first issues were printed on a Washington press purchased from the discontinued Oakland Chronicle of Pontiac, Michigan. It was hauled from Pontiac in a wagon over rough roads to a building at Bates, the press could produce 250 pages an hour, hand operated by two men. The first issues were 14 by 20 inches in size, with five columns of type, Sheldon McKnight became the first publisher with John Pitts Sheldon as editor. In the 1850s, the paper was developed into a leading Democratic publication under the ownership of Wilbur F. Storey, Storey left for the Chicago Times in 1861, taking a lot of the staff with him. In the 1870s ownership passed to William E. Quinby, who continued its Democratic leanings and established a London, in 1940, the Knight Newspapers purchased the Free Press. During the following 47 years the Free Press competed with The Detroit News, the Free Press was delivered and sold as a morning paper while the News was sold and delivered as an evening newspaper. In 1987, the paper entered into a one hundred-year joint operating agreement with its rival, the combined company is called the Detroit Media Partnership. The two papers began to publish joint Saturday and Sunday editions, though the editorial content of each remained separate. At the time, the Detroit Free Press was the tenth highest circulation paper in the United States, july 13,1995, Newspaper Guild-represented employees of the Free Press and News and the pressmen, printers and Teamsters working for the Detroit Newspapers distribution arm went on strike. By October, about 40% of the staffers had crossed the picket line. The strike was resolved in three years later, and the unions remain active at the paper, representing a majority of the employees under their jurisdiction. In 1998, the Free Press vacated its headquarters in downtown Detroit. August 3,2005, Knight Ridder sold the Free Press to the Gannett company, the News, in turn, was sold to MediaNews Group, Gannett continues to be the managing partner in the papers joint operating agreement. The Free Press resumed publication of its own Sunday edition, May 7,2006, a quirk in the operating agreement, however, allows the News to continue printing its editorial page in the Sunday Free Press

42.
Florida Today
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Florida Today is the major daily newspaper serving Brevard County. The Gannett corporation started the paper in 1966, in addition to its regular daily publication, Florida Today publishes three weekly community newspapers which are tailored for the North, South and Central areas within Brevard County. Average daily circulation of the publication is 54,021. Circulation of the paper tends to be higher in the winter, lower in summer, gannetts Florida Today, initially simply TODAY, was built at the Cocoa Tribune, to compete with the regional and dominant Orlando Sentinel and the statewide Miami Herald. It continued this free circulation promotion to specific parts of the county until its circulation met the minimum set for the advertisers, both the Titusville and Melbourne papers maintained their independence and continued to be printed at each publications own facility. A teen section The Verge was by, for and about teens, the section was composed by 40 students, as long as they were under 20. The section had regular articles in such as Generation Gaps. The section began expanding into parts of the paper and throughout the week. It was originally published on the back of Sundays People section, at a 2006 conference, The Verge won two national awards, First and Second Place for Best News Story. In May 2007, it was announced that The Verge would be integrated with the paper, rather than have its own section, Florida Today owns the weekly Central Florida Future, originally the University of Central Florida school newspaper along with www. centralfloridafuture. com. It is distributed free of charge on campus as well as several nearby businesses. The paper publishes annual business segment magazine directories including Health Source, a medical provider directory and Legal Source, the newspaper website along with local news, includes coverage of space, travel, health, entertainment, weather, sports and coverage of youth sports

Florida Today
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Florida Today

43.
The Greenville News
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The Greenville News is a daily morning newspaper published in Greenville, South Carolina. After The State in Columbia and Charlestons Post and Courier, it is the third largest paper in South Carolina, the Greenville News started off as a four-page publication in 1874 by A. M. For a one-year subscription, the cost was eight dollars. ”The Peace family acquired the evening paper The Piedmont in 1927, in 1965 both papers helped to form Multimedia Inc. Then in 1995, the afternoon paper and the larger morning paper merged to become The News-Piedmont. In December 1985 Gannett purchased Multimedia, changing the name back to The Greenville News. Today The News prints over 50,000 newspapers a day, in addition to The Greenville News, the company publishes eGreenville, which features local entertainment, news, photos, and reviews. A free publication, it is available at more than 1,100 locations in Anderson, Greenville, Pickens and Spartanburg counties

The Greenville News
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The January 22, 2012 front page of The Greenville News

44.
Hattiesburg American
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The Hattiesburg American is a U. S. newspaper based in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, that serves readers in Forrest, Lamar, and surrounding counties in south-central Mississippi. The newspaper is owned by Gannett Company, Inc, the Hattiesburg American was founded in 1897 as a weekly newspaper, the Hattiesburg Progress. In 1907, the Hattiesburg Progress was acquired by The Hattiesburg Daily News, when the U. S. entered World War I in 1917, the newspaper was renamed the Hattiesburg American. The Hattiesburg American was purchased by the Harmon family in the 1920s and was sold to the Hederman family in 1960, Gannett Company acquired the newspaper in 1982. In the early 1960s, the Hattiesburg American spoke out against the development of the Republican Party in Mississippi, the publication echoed the state Democratic contention that the primary beneficiaries of a two-party system would be the 920,000 Negroes who dwell here. The American also criticized then freshman U. S, representative Robert Taft, Jr. son of the late U. S. Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, for having remarked that no segregationist belongs on a Republican ticket or even in the party, in 2005, the Hattiesburg American received Gannetts 10th Freedom of Information Award for outstanding work on behalf of the First Amendment. In settlement documents filed in court in Jackson, Mississippi. In 2009, publication of the Hattiesburg American was moved to Gannetts Clarion-Ledger facility in Jackson, in June 2014, the Hattiesburg American staff announced they would vacate the Main Street location and move their offices to 4200 Mamie Street in midtown Hattiesburg. Lewis Elliott Chaze Iris Kelso Hattiesburg American

Hattiesburg American
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Hattiesburg American Masthead
Hattiesburg American
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Hattiesburg American Office Building at 4200 Mamie Street

45.
Herald Times Reporter
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The Herald Times Reporter is a daily newspaper based in Manitowoc, Wisconsin. It is part of the Gannett Company chain of newspapers, the Herald Times Reporter is primarily distributed in Manitowoc County. The newspaper is associated with the Lakeshore Chronicle, a free newspaper circulated on Wednesdays and Sundays, the first newspaper in Manitowoc began in November 1850 when a newspaper press was brought on a schooner from Milwaukee. A weekly newspaper called the Weekly Press was printed, it was renamed the Weekly Herald in 1955, in 1898, the Weekly Herald became a daily newspaper, the Herald-Press Publishing Company was formed and it printed the Daily Herald and Weekly Press. The Weekly Press was absorbed into the Daily Herald in 1953 and it purchased the Two Rivers Reporter based in nearby Two Rivers in 1970 and the newspaper took its current name Herald Times Reporter. It was purchased by Gannett Company in 2000, the Manitowoc Herald Times Reporter Mobile website Gannett Midwest Publishing

Herald Times Reporter

46.
The Indianapolis Star
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The Indianapolis Star is a morning daily newspaper that began publishing on June 6,1903 in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. It has been the major daily paper in the city since 1999. It won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting twice, in 1975 and 1991 and it is currently owned by the Gannett Company. The Indianapolis Star was founded on June 6,1903, by Muncie industrialist George F. McCulloch as competition to two other Indianapolis dailies, the Indianapolis Journal and the Indianapolis Sentinel and it acquired the Journal a year and two days later, and bought the Sentinel in 1906. Daniel G. Reid purchased the Star in 1904 and hired John Shaffer as publisher, later replacing him, in the ensuing court proceedings, Saffer emerged as the majority owner of the paper in 1911 and served as publisher and editor until his death in 1943. Central Newspapers, Inc. and its owner, Eugene C, pulliam—maternal grandfather of future Vice President Dan Quayle—purchased the Star from Shaffers estate on April 25,1944 and adopted initiatives to increase the papers circulation. In 1944, the Star had trailed the evening Indianapolis News, in 1948, Pulliam purchased the News and combined the business, mechanical, advertising, and circulation operations of the two papers, with the News moving into the Stars building in 1950. The editorial and news operations remained separate, Eugene S. Pulliam took over as publisher upon the death of his father in 1975, a role he retained until his own death in 1999. In September 1995, the staffs of the Star and the News merged. In 1999, the News ceased publication, leaving the Star as the major daily paper in Indianapolis. Soon thereafter the trustees of Central Newspapers, Inc. the owner of the Star and other newspapers in Indiana and Arizona, on July 27,2012, it was announced that The Indianapolis Star would relocate from its headquarters at 307 North Pennsylvania Street. It was later announced that the new location would be the former Nordstrom department store in Circle Centre Mall and this move took place from the summer to fall of 2014. The former location had been used since 1907, the Star has won the Pulitzer Prize twice for investigative reporting. In 1975, the Star was honored for its 1974 series on corruption within the Indianapolis Police Department and it was cited again in 1991 for its 1990 series on medical malpractice. The Indianapolis Star has the largest and most advanced printing presses in the nation. The Pulliam Production Center at 8278 N. Georgetown Road on the northwest side of Indianapolis cost $72 million and covers 200,000 square feet, the press hall that houses the four MAN Roland Geoman presses has 30,672 square feet on two levels. Each of the presses weighs 2,100 short tons, stands seven stories tall, with all four presses running,300,000 papers can be printed in just one hour. The Pulliam Production Center allows tours of the facility, part of the newspapers masthead displays the text of 2 Corinthians 3,17, Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty

The Indianapolis Star
The Indianapolis Star
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Former headquarters at 307 North Pennsylvania Street

47.
Iowa City Press-Citizen
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The Iowa City Press-Citizen is a daily newspaper published in Iowa City, Iowa, USA, that serves most of Johnson County and portions of surrounding counties. Its primary competitors are The Gazette of Cedar Rapids, which has a bureau in Iowa City, and The Daily Iowan. The Press-Citizen was formed in 1920 from the merger of two newspapers, the Democratic Iowa State Press, founded in 1860, and the Republican Iowa City Citizen, merritt Spiedel bought the Press-Citizen in 1921, Spiedels company merged with the Gannett Company in 1977. In 1937, Spiedel hired architect Henry L. Fisk as consulting architect for a new Streamline Moderne style building for the paper, located at 319 E. Washington Street, the building also housed a mural by artist Mildred W. Pelzer, Symphony of Iowa. In 1966, the mural was restored by Forrest Bailey, who was commissioned by Richard Feddersen for the work, the painting was later donated by Fedderson to the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art. The Press-Citizen switched from afternoon to morning publication on September 15,1997, on February 15,2015, the Press-Citizen announced that it would be discontinuing the Sunday edition on March 1 of the same year. Iowa City Press-Citizen Mobile phone edition

Iowa City Press-Citizen
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The January 4, 2008, front page of Iowa City Press-Citizen

48.
Kitsap Sun
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The Kitsap Sun is a daily newspaper published in Bremerton, Washington, that covers general news. It serves the West Sound area covering Kitsap, Jefferson, and it has a circulation of about 30,000 while reaching over 100,000 adult readers seven days a week. The Sun was first published in 1935 and named the Bremerton Sun to compete with the Seattle Star directly across Puget Sound, four years later, the circulation of the Sun surpassed that of its competitor. In 1940, John P. Scripps Newspaper Group obtained control of the newspaper, in June 1984, it formally changed names from the Bremerton Sun to The Sun. It was merged with the E. W. Scripps Company in 1986, the company spun out its newspaper assets into Journal Media Group in April 2015. The Sun has received awards from local organizations and charities. Both the photography and editorial teams have won awards for their excellence, the University of Washington Library holds copies of the Kitsap Sun from 1935 to present. Official website Newspapers carried by University of Washington Libraries Echo Media, Bremerton Kitsap Sun

Kitsap Sun
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Kitsap Sun, Bremerton, WA

49.
Knoxville News Sentinel
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The Knoxville News Sentinel is a daily newspaper in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States, owned by the Gannett Company. The newspaper was formed in 1926 from the merger of two competing newspapers, The Knoxville News and The Knoxville Sentinel, john Trevis Hearn began publishing The Sentinel in December 1886, while The News was started in 1921 by Robert P. Scripps and Roy W. Howard. The two merged in 1926, with the first edition of The Knoxville News-Sentinel appearing on November 21 of that year, the editor from 1921 to 1931, Edward J. Meeman, later was sent to Memphis to edit the since defunct Memphis Press-Scimitar. In 1986, the News-Sentinel became a paper, with the other paper in Knoxville. The Journal ceased publication as a daily in 1991, when the joint operating agreement between the two papers expired, in 2002, the paper dropped the hyphen from its name to become the Knoxville News Sentinel. The News Sentinels president and publisher is Patrick J. Birmingham, staffers include photographers Michael Patrick, J. McCoy, Morgan Simmons, Carly Harrington, Ed Marcum, Wayne Bledsoe and Amy McRary. Knoxnews. com staffers include online producers Will Woodbery and Angela Gosnell, Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Archived from the original on October 20,2006

Knoxville News Sentinel
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Knoxville News Sentinel/knoxnews.com

50.
Las Cruces Sun-News
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Las Cruces Sun-News, founded in 1881, is a daily newspaper published in Las Cruces, New Mexico. The Sun-News started in 1881 as the Rio Grande Republican and went through mergers to become the Las Cruces Daily News in 1934. Another daily, the Las Cruces Sun, started publication in 1937, the paper became part of the Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnership, a joint venture formed in 2003 between MediaNews Group and Gannett, with MediaNews Group the managing partner. In 2015, Gannett acquired full ownership of the Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnership, Las Cruces Sun-News website Official mobile website

51.
The Leaf-Chronicle
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The Leaf-Chronicle is a newspaper in the state of Tennessee, founded, officially, in 1808. In 1808, The Clarksville Chronicle newspaper started publication, today, however, no editions earlier than 1811 seem to be extant. Later, The Tobacco Leaf appeared as a result of the reputation as a center for tobacco growing and shipping. Early newspapers started out as four-page journals devoted to political news, eventually they grew to become full-fledged publications that featured more news and community information, in addition to having opinion pages with political views. In 1890, The Clarksville Chronicle merged with The Tobacco Leaf, in the 1970s, the citys name was dropped as the coverage area increased, shortening the title of the current newspaper to The Leaf-Chronicle. In December 1995, The Leaf-Chronicle became part of the Gannett Newspaper Division, the Saturday edition of The Leaf Chronicle was a complete newspaper that featured eight pages of tornado coverage. Within four days, the staff was able to print from the newspaper press. The departments worked out of an empty store for eight months, until the main offices were rebuilt. Washer retired in 2008 and remains the newspapers publisher emeritus and he was replaced by Andrew Oppmann, also publisher of Murfreesboros Daily News Journal. Also in 2008, the newspaper consolidated its printing and production operations with its sister newspaper, Oppmann departed from both Gannett papers in late 2010. The Leaf-Chronicle official site Official mobile site Official iPhone site

The Leaf-Chronicle
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The July 27, 2005 front page of The Leaf-Chronicle

52.
Mansfield News Journal
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The News Journal was formed by the merger of the Mansfield News and the Mansfield Journal in 1932. The paper celebrated its 75th anniversary in December 2007, ted Daniels is the newspapers managing editor. Daniels filled the role in January 2016 after the retirement of longtime editor Tom Brennan, the paper is owned by Gannett and has downsized its print operation in recent years to focus more upon online content. The newspapers web site was chosen the states best among newspapers in its category in 2007 in the annual AP contest. Ohio portal Journalism portal Mansfield News Journal Official mobile website

53.
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
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The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is a daily morning broadsheet printed in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is the newspaper in Milwaukee, the largest newspaper in Wisconsin and is distributed widely throughout the state. It is owned by the Gannett Company, the new Journal Sentinel then became a seven-day morning paper. In early 2003, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel began printing operations at its new printing facility in West Milwaukee, the merged papers volume and edition numbers follow those of the Journal. The founder of Milwaukee, Solomon Juneau, provided the funds for editor John ORourke. It was first published as a weekly on June 27,1837. A deathly ill ORourke struggled to help the paper to find its feet before he died six months later of tuberculosis at the age of 24, on Juneaus request, ORourkes associate, Harrison Reed, remained to take over the Sentinels operations. He continued the struggle to keep the paper ahead of its debts, meanwhile, the establishment of the Whig party in the territory thrust the Sentinel into the hurly-burly of partisan politics. In 1840 Reed was assaulted by individuals whom the Sentinel charged were hirelings of Democratic Governor Henry Dodge, later that year the paper abandoned its independence and proclaimed itself a Whig paper with its endorsement of William Henry Harrison for president in 1840. In financial straits, Reed lost control of the paper in 1841 when Democrats foreclosed on the Sentinels mortgaged debt, only after the Democrats successful election of Dodge for Congress was Reed able to regain control of the paper. The next year he sold the Sentinel to Elisha Starr, an editor who had founded a new Whig paper in response to the Sentinels Democratic lapse, Reed later became a carpetbag governor of Florida during Reconstruction. Starr guarded the Sentinels position as the sole Whig organ in Milwaukee, heavily in debt, he secured the partnership of David M. Keeler, who paid off the papers creditors. Keeler took on partner John S. Fillmore and succeeded in ousting Starr, Keeler and Fillmore trumped his efforts by turning their Sentinel into a daily on December 9,1844, while still publishing a weekly edition. The paper finally began to prosper and establish itself as a political force in the nascent state of Wisconsin. Weed recommended his associate editor and protégé, Rufus King, King was a native of New York City, a graduate of West Point, a brevet lieutenant, the son of the president of Columbia College and the grandson of U. S. In June 1845 King came to Milwaukee and became the Sentinels editor three months later, King was lionized by the community. It was his suggestion that made the Sentinel the first paper in the Midwest to employ newsboys to boost street sales, due largely to Kings connections to the East, the quality of the Sentinel greatly improved. He declared the Sentinel an antislavery paper and also supported temperance legislation, King invested his own money in the paper, purchasing the first power press in the Midwest

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
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Journal Communications building

54.
Montgomery Advertiser
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The Montgomery Advertiser is a daily newspaper and 24-7 digital news provider located in Montgomery, Alabama. The newspaper began publication in 1829 as The Planters Gazette and its first editor was Moseley Baker. It became the Montgomery Advertiser in 1833, hudson, a young Alabama newspaperman, joined the staff of the Advertiser and rose through the ranks of the newspaper. Hudson was central to improving the situation of the newspaper. Hudson purchased the shares of the company in 1935, and five years later he bought The Alabama Journal. Ownership of the Advertiser subsequently passed from Hudsons heirs to Carmage Walls, the newspaper won the first of its three Pulitzer Prize awards under the direction of Grover C. Hall, who came to the Advertiser in 1910 and served as editor from 1926 until his death, the Advertiser waged war on the Ku Klux Klan during the 1920s, and became nationally prominent for the coverage and editorial stance. Hall later argued for release of the black Scottsboro Boys, one December 1938 editorial by Hall was published in the U. S. Congressional Record on January 17,1939, The Egregious Gentile Called to Account, Hall concluded that in order to save the lovely pillars of civilization we shall have to purge ourselves. That striding Colossus known as the Nordic Gentile must be born again, Hall, Jr. worked at the paper from age 20 and served 15 years as editor after World War II. He allied with the politician George C. Wallace in 1958, in 1975, the newspaper investigated the shooting of Bernard Whitehurt by police and wrote news stories that questioned the original police reports. To counter claims that newspaper was fabricating stories, publisher, Harold E. Martin, took, the Alabama Journal continued as a local afternoon paper until April 16,1993, when it published its last issue before merging with the morning Advertiser. The Advertiser is the largest of the 22 daily newspapers published in Alabama, three other newspapers—the Birmingham News, Huntsville Times and Press-Register —were once larger than the Advertiser but reduced their publications to three days a week. The Advertiser also publishes online at www. montgomeryadvertiser. com and is available via smart phones, the current President and Publisher is Robert Granfeldt Jr. Teresa Hicks is the Advertising Director, the newspaper has earned numerous state, regional and national awards, including three Pulitzer Prizes,1928, Grover C. Hall, Editorial Writing, for his editorials against gangsterism, floggings and racial,1970, Harold E. Martin, Investigative Reporting, for his expose of a commercial scheme for using Alabama prisoners for drug experimentation and obtaining blood plasma from them. 1988, Staff of The Alabama Journal, General News Reporting, for its investigation of the states unusually high infant-mortality rate. List of newspapers in Alabama Official website Todays Montgomery Advertiser front page at the Newseum website Gannett subsidiary profile of the Montgomery Advertiser The Montgomery Advertiser

55.
The News Leader
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The News Leader is a daily newspaper owned by Gannett Company, serving Staunton, Virginia and the surrounding areas. The paper was founded in 1904 by Brig. Gen. Hierome L. Opie as The Evening Leader, while it traces its founding to Opie in 1904, the paper had a predecessor, The Daily News, that was founded in 1890. Opie worked as a reporter for The Daily News, which was a morning paper, in 1919 Opie bought The Daily News and combined it with The Morning Leader, a paper he had started to compete directly with The News. The combined paper was called The Staunton News-Leader, when the papers were combined, the new edition adopted the volume number of The Daily News, so the current editions volume number goes back further than the 1904 founding date. In the 1960s the Opie family combined The Staunton News-Leader with The Evening Leader and Staunton was left only one daily newspaper. Daily was dropped from the name in 2002, the Opies sold the paper in 1979 to Multimedia Inc. which was purchased by Gannett Co. in 1995. The newspaper launched its online edition in 2001, the News Leader Official mobile website

The News Leader
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The July 27, 2005 front page of The News Leader

56.
The News Journal
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The News Journal is the main newspaper for Wilmington, Delaware, and the surrounding area. It is headquartered in unincorporated New Castle County, Delaware, near New Castle, for most of the 20th century, the Du Pont family owned two Delaware newspapers, The Morning News and The Evening Journal. Ownership of both papers was consolidated in 1919 when feuding factions of the family reconciled, forming the News Journal Company, duPont decided to sell The News Journal Company in 1978. Gannett won the war, beating the Hearst Corporation and The Washington Post Company. Gannett paid $60 million for the two Delaware papers and merged them in 1989 to form one paper, The News Journal. In 2010, The News Journal Company became The News Journal Media Group in an effort to identify their extensive product portfolio of print, digital, video. The News Journal covers New Castle County most in-depth, but also considerable coverage of the Delaware General Assembly. The paper also offers limited coverage of northeast Maryland and southeast Pennsylvania, the paper publishes national and international articles from wire services. The News Journal also maintains a Washington, D. C. bureau, regular sections News Local & Business Sports Life Classifieds Special sections Innovate Delaware Health Crossroads - contains news about schools and other local, human-interest features. High schools in Delaware each have pick a student to write a report about the happenings at their school for Crossroads. In April 2007, The News Journal began reprinting articles from local school newspapers in the Crossroads section. The paper began offering an online news update weekdays at 4,30 pm, the once-daily update has evolved into as-it-happens online news coverage that often results in a couple dozen news updates per day. DelawareOnline. Com was the first newspaper in the country to offer a morning and afternoon online newscast, the daily newscasts have been replaced with more of a breaking-news feel instead of fixed broadcast times. DelawareOnline. com was cited in a 2008 Wilkerson and Associates study as the site Delawareans visit first for news, more than one million unique visitors are recorded each month. The News Journal participates in the Newspapers for Education program, which provides free newspapers for area schools, on Fridays during the school year, the paper publishes an informational feature for school children, in the form of colorful, pull-out, double-truck page in the Life section. In 2006, The News Journal provided Glasgow High School a $10,000 grant to help the schools newspaper, the News Journal also sent editors to Glasgow to help the Dragon Fire with page layout and web design. The News Journal Company also runs the Needy Family Fund, which partners with local charities to assist family in need of food, each Christmas season, The News Journal asks readers to donate to the fund, and publishes a list of those who do. The News Journal Media Group has partnered with nearly half of the registered companies in New Castle County

The News Journal
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The News Journal

57.
The News-Star
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The News-Star is the principal newspaper of Monroe and northeastern Louisiana. The newspaper is a Gannett Company publication, the News Star began in 1890 as the Monroe Evening News. In 1909, coincidentally the year that John Travis Nixon died at the age of forty-one, The Evening News merged with The Daily Star to form the afternoon newspaper, The Monroe News-Star. In 1908, Robert Wilson Ewing, I, while still the publisher of the since defunct New Orleans Daily States, in 1929, Ewing bought the since defunct Monroe Morning World. In 1930, he acquired the News-Star, since switched from an afternoon to a morning publication, Ewing was accordingly among the two or three most influential persons in the Louisiana journalism community. The two Monroe newspapers remained in the Ewing family until the Gannett acquisition on June 16,1977, the Morning World and News-Star consolidated on August 4,1980, to become The News-Star-World. The name was changed and the first edition of The News Star was printed on May 22,1988. John D. Ewing, one of the five sons of Robert Ewing, was editor and publisher of the Shreveport Times, John Ewing moved to Shreveport in 1915 to become the associate publisher of the Shreveport Times. When his father died, Ewing became the publisher of the Shreveport Times, all three newspapers were known for their conservative editorials. Robert Ewing, III, a nephew of John Ewing, was a nature photographer, another Ewing relative, Edmund Graves Brown, was a News Star executive who served as the assistant general manager until Gannett, an Arlington, Virginia, firm, purchased the combined News-Star-World. In 1980, “World” was dropped from the name, which became the News Star, the News Star usually endorses conservative candidates. In 2004, it supported successful Republicans Rodney Alexander for the United States House of Representatives, in 2007, the paper endorsed Royal Alexander, a former Rodney Alexander staff member, who unsuccessfully carried the Republican Party banner for Louisiana attorney general in the 2007 elections. Royal Alexander of Shreveport was handily defeated by Buddy Caldwell of Tallulah, Charles E. Dale Thorn, journalist at Monroe Morning World in late 1960s, Louisiana State University professor, and press secretary to Governor Edwin Edwards Official website Official mobile website

The News-Star
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The circulation department of The News-Star
The News-Star
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Building housing the Newsroom of the paper.

58.
Oshkosh Northwestern
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The Oshkosh Northwestern is a daily newspaper based in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. It has been part of the Gannett chain of newspapers since 2000, the Northwestern is primarily distributed in Winnebago, Waushara, and Green Lake counties. For the forty years preceding establishment of the name as Oshkosh Northwestern in 1979. The building for the newspaper was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on May 13,1982 and it is a significant example of 1930 Renaissance architecture. Oshkosh Northwestern online Gannett subsidiary profile of the Oshkosh Northwestern

Oshkosh Northwestern
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Daily Northwestern Building

59.
Poughkeepsie Journal
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The Poughkeepsie Journal is a newspaper based in Poughkeepsie, New York owned by the Gannett Company, which bought the paper in 1977. Founded in 1785, the Journal is the oldest paper in New York state, throughout its existence, the Journal has been a paper of historical significance given the various events in the Poughkeepsie area. For example, in 1788, the editor of the Journal was the reporter of the ratification of the United States Constitution by New York in that year. The paper also served as a point of stories during the Franklin D. Roosevelt administration when the President was at his estate in nearby Hyde Park. In the book My Side of the Mountain, the Journal was mentioned under its name at the time, the Journals main office is a fieldstone Colonial Revival building on Civic Center Plaza, the north end of Market Street in downtown Poughkeepsie. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, though the Journal has been published for over 220 years, it has not published under the Journal nameplate for the whole of its existence. The evolution of the names of the paper is as follows

60.
Reno Gazette-Journal
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The Reno Gazette-Journal is the main daily newspaper for Reno, Nevada. It is owned by the Gannett Company and it came into being when the Nevada State Journal and the Reno Evening Gazette were combined in 1983. Speidel Newspapers bought the Gazette in 1939, and bought the Journal a month later, Gannett bought Speidel Newspapers in 1977. The Reno Gazette-Journal is one of two covering the Reno-Sparks metropolitan area, which is also served by the Reno News & Review

Reno Gazette-Journal
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Reno Gazette-Journal

61.
San Angelo Standard-Times
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San Angelo Standard-Times is a daily newspaper based in San Angelo, Texas, US, since 1884. It is owned by the Gannett Company, the newspaper was established in 1884 by J. G. Murphy, the citys second mayor. Mr. Murphy sold the paper in the 1920s to Houston H. Harte, in 1924 it became one of the two original flagships of the Harte-Hanks newspaper chain. The San Angelo Standard-Times building was constructed in 1951, providing 38,000 square feet on two floors, in 1984, a rehabilitation project added another 10,000 square feet. Scripps began operating the newspaper in 1997 after purchasing it from Harte-Hanks, the newspaper and its reporters have won various journalism awards, including awards from the Associated Press of Texas, presented in 2015. The Western novelist Elmer Kelton began his career in 1948 as the editor at the Standard-Times. Kelton friend and understudy Patrick Dearen, another western novelist and historian, is also a former Standard-Times staff writer

San Angelo Standard-Times
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San Angelo Standard-Times building

62.
Statesman Journal
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The Statesman Journal is the major daily newspaper published in Salem, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1851, the Oregon Statesman later merged with the Capital Journal to form the current newspaper, the Statesman Journal is distributed in Salem, Keizer, and much of the mid-Willamette Valley. The average daily circulation is 36,629 Monday-Friday,118,168 Saturday, the Oregon Statesman was founded on March 28,1851, by Asahel Bush, a Democrat, in response to the Whig-controlled Portland-based paper, The Oregonian. Congressional delegate Samuel Thurston assisted Bush in starting the newspaper while Thurston was in Washington, printed using a hand press, the paper was originally based in Oregon City, but moved to Salem in June 1853 when the Oregon State Capitol was relocated to that city. The paper was used as a mouthpiece of the Democratic Party, in March 1863, Bush sold the paper and entered the banking field. The name of the paper was changed to the Salem Statesman, in 1866, the Statesman ceased publication, only to resume in 1869 under the guidance of editor Samuel A. Clarke and under the new moniker of The Statesman and Unionist. The Unionist portion was removed from the name within a short amount of time, also in 1884, ownership passed to Jasper Wilkins and Alonzo Gesner, with Gesner selling out his part within a year. Will H. Parry established the Capital Journal on March 1,1888, initially as a for-profit venture, Parry sold the Journal by the end of the year, one of many ownership changes in subsequent years. Around 1918, George Putnam purchased the Capital Journal and served as editor for 30 years before selling to Bernard Mainwaring in 1953, meanwhile, Charles A. Sprague, who went on to become governor of Oregon, bought the Statesman in 1929. In 1954, Mainwaring and Sprague agreed that their respective papers should cooperate closely, the Journal moved into the Statesmans new facility and the two papers began sharing printing facilities while keeping independent writers and editors. In 1973, both papers were sold to national publisher Gannett, the company that publishes USA Today, in 1980, they were combined to form the Statesman Journal. Dating to the Statesmans inception, it is the second-oldest Oregon newspaper, the paper won ten first-place awards in the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Associations annual Better Newspaper Contest in 2001, the most in its division. In the 2006 contest, the paper took first place in its division for overall excellence, best editorial page, in July 2008, Steve Silberman was named the publisher of the newspaper. The newspaper primarily covers news in the Salem-Keizer metropolitan area in the section of the Willamette Valley. Coverage includes state politics, Salem area news, area sports, business news, circulation is focused on Marion and Polk counties with a market size of 323,3000 residents, with some additional circulation in neighboring Linn, Lincoln, Yamhill, and Benton counties. In 2008 The Statesman Journal had circulation of 46,826 from Monday through Saturday, in 2010, average daily circulation had declined to 38,099 Monday-Friday and 37,602 Saturday, with Sunday readership of 46,745. The newspaper also publishes the The Stayton Mail of Stayton and the Appeal Tribune of Silverton, list of newspapers in Oregon Photograph, Statesman Journal building in Salem McKay, Floyd J. Statesman Journal. Official website Official mobile website Newsroom Ethics Policy - ASNE

Statesman Journal
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The July 27, 2005 front page of the Statesman Journal

63.
The Tennessean
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The Tennessean is the principal daily newspaper in Nashville, Tennessee. Its circulation area covers 39 counties in Middle Tennessee and eight counties in southern Kentucky, in March 2013, The Tennesseans circulation was reported as 100,825 daily,102,855 and 227,626. In contrast, as of November 2,2005, the reported daily circulation of 177,714, Saturday circulation of 199,489. Its circulation area overlaps those of the Clarksville Leaf-Chronicle and The Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro, the company publishes several specialty publications, including Nashville Lifestyles magazine. The papers primary print competitors are the weekly Nashville Scene and the Nashville Business Journal, in 2004 Gannett announced the acquisition of the Franklin Review-Appeal, and The Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro from Morris Multimedia. The Review-Appeal became a supplement of The Tennessean, while the Daily News Journal continued to operate as an independent newspaper, the paper maintains two Goss Colorliner presses. In 2002, the completed installation of a MAN Roland UNISET press. The iconic John Seigenthaler joined The Tennessean in 1949, resigning in 1960 to act as Robert F. Kennedys administrative assistant and he rejoined The Tennessean as editor in 1962, publisher in 1973, and chairman in 1982 before retiring as chairman emeritus in 1991. Ellen Leifeld was named as publisher in September 2005, succeeding Leslie Giallombardo, carol Hudler was named publisher in 2009 when Leifeld retired. Hudler was replaced by Laura Hollingsworth, who was named president, Frank Sutherland served as editor of the newspaper from 1989-2004. He began his career as a reporter at the paper in the 1960s. He announced his retirement in September 2004 and he was briefly succeeded by Everett J. Mitchell II, the former managing editor of the Detroit News, who was the first African American to be editor of The Tennessean. In September 2006, Mark Silverman was announced as editor and he was replaced by Maria De Varenne in 2011, who held the executive editor post until February 2014. At that time, Stefanie Murray was named president for content and engagement. She was previously an assistant managing editor at the Detroit Free Press, the Tennessean, Nashvilles primary daily newspaper, traces its roots back to the Nashville Whig, a weekly paper that began publication on September 1,1812. The paper underwent various mergers and acquisitions throughout the 19th century, the first issue of the Nashville Tennessean was printed on Sunday May 12,1907. The paper was founded by Col. Luke Lea, a 28-year-old attorney, in 1910, the publishers purchased a controlling interest in the Nashville American. They began publishing an edition known as The Tennessean American, when the American formally folded in 1911, some of its employees banded together to found the Nashville Democrat

The Tennessean
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The July 27, 2005 front page of The Tennessean
The Tennessean
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Offices for The Tennessean. The Gannett logo replaced the Nashville Banner logo in 1998.

64.
The Times (Shreveport)
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The Times is a Gannett daily newspaper based in Shreveport, Louisiana. Its distribution area includes twelve parishes in Northwest Louisiana and three counties in east Texas and its website provides news updates, videos, photo galleries, forums, blogs, event calendars, entertainment, classifieds, contests, databases and a regional search engine. Local news content produced by The Times is available on the website at no charge for seven days, from 1895 to 1991, The Times had competition from the afternoon Monday-Saturday daily, the since defunct Shreveport Journal. The papers were printed at the same 222 Lake Street address and shared opposite sides of the building but were entirely separate. Publisher Charles T. Beaird effective March 30,1991, closed the Shreveport Journal for financial reasons stemming from sharply reduced circulation. Thereafter, the page opposite the editorial page of The Times, the Times sponsors political debates, economic summits, forums, leadership awards, and other community-oriented initiatives. The Times also provides community support through Gannett Foundation grants and community partnerships, for more than 30 years The Times Joy Fund has provided funds to charitable organizations during the holidays through donations provided by readers with funds exceeding $100,000 annually. Get Healthy new monthly health news Red River Moms magazine monthly parenting and child information CareerBuilder Weekly weekly employment listings, arthur Winton Brown -- Secretary-Treasurer and part owner. Former Mayor of Wellington, New Zealand, lane Crockett -- entertainment writer and theater/arts critics from 1977–2004 Preston Allen Pap Dean -- editorial cartoonist and inductee of the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame. Tim Greening -- The Times humor columnist, grits Gresham -- former Times outdoor editor and host of ABCs The American Sportsman television series from 1966–1979. Sarah Hudson-Pierce - Shreveport book publisher and occasional columnist for The Times, wiley W. Hilburn - Times columnist and head of the Louisiana Tech University Journalism Department, inductee of Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame. Bill P. Keith - reported on George W. DArtois scandal in the middle 1970s, harold R. Hal King - suspense novelist who was an investigative reporter at The Times in the 1970s. Jim Leslie - Shreveport Times journalist turned advertising executive, assassinated in Baton Rouge, william Hawthorn Lynch - sportswriter, assistant city editor and political reporter, established the Baton Rouge bureau of The Times, states first inspector general. Maple - former executive editor and state editor, margaret Martin - Society editor and columnist. Raymond Lamar McDaniel - city editor, named executive editor in 1968, rupert Peyton - Reporter, historian, and state representative from 1932 to 1936. Norman L. Richardson -- Former state editor known for coverage of hurricanes of 1960s, George W. Shannon -- Assistant city editor, 1935-1938, editor of Shreveport Journal, 1953-1971. Dale Thorn, editor at The Times in late 1960s, Louisiana State University professor, representative Jim McCrery of Louisiana, native of Philadelphia, Mississippi. Josiah Lee J. L. M. Fowler, former mayor of Coushatta, the Shreveport Times official site Official mobile website

The Times (Shreveport)
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Shreveport Times office building on Lake Street in Shreveport, Louisiana
The Times (Shreveport)
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The Times journalist Craig Durrett died in 2015 at the age of sixty from complications of shingles.
The Times (Shreveport)
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A few weeks after Durrett's death, opinion page editor Jeffrey Keith "Jeff" Benson, died of cancer at the age of fifty.
The Times (Shreveport)
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Versatile journalist Jim Montgomery worked to preserve the Strand Theatre.

65.
The Town Talk
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The Town Talk, started as The Daily Town Talk in 1883 and later named the Alexandria Daily Town Talk, is the major newspaper of Central Louisiana. It is published by Gannett in Alexandria, the seat of Rapides Parish, the daily newspaper has a circulation of some 19,500 daily and 27,500 on Sundays. It covers the news primarily in seven parishes with a population of approximately 400,000, the coverage area reaches from the Mississippi River on the east to the Texas border on the west. The Town Talk was born on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17,1883, the parent company was called “McCormick & Company Inc. ”In 1962, Joe D. Smith, Jr. became publisher of The Town Talk. He was the husband of Jane Wilson Smith, a McCormick heir whose family owned the newspaper, over the years, Smith was also the general manager, president, and chairman of the board. Under his tutelage, The Town Talk became the first daily newspaper in Louisiana to become computerized and he took the view that newspapers were expected to foster growth and improvement in the community as well as report the news. Some four years after the death of Jane Smith, Smith sold to Central Newspapers for $62 million and it fits with our goal of acquiring newspaper properties with a strong position in their market area and a proven history of journalistic integrity. Weils analysis was in sharp contrast to that of Adras LaBorde, at the time, LaBorde described The Town Talk as an overgrown country weekly published on a six-day basis. The publication had indeed changed little in the years between 1925 and 1945, on July 7,2003, Paul V. Carty became executive editor of The Town Talk. Prior to his appointment, he was the editor of Gannett’s Star-Gazette in Elmira, New York. Carty started his career in 1980 at the Clearwater Sun in Clearwater, Florida. He is an instructor in the Pennsylvania State Universitys College of Communications. Goodnight, news editor, and Randall Benson, sports editor, under the McCormick heirs, The Town Talk considered itself a politically Independent newspaper and did not endorse candidates. In 1996, however, it backed the Democrat Mary Landrieu in her narrow, the Town Talk urged Landrieu to move to the right politically because Jenkins positions were far too rigid and unyielding to warrant our recommendation. In 2004, it endorsed Alexandria Republican Jock Scott in his race for the U. S. House of Representatives for Louisianas 5th congressional district. In 2007, it supported Republican Bobby Jindal in his race for governor. An upstairs of some six thousand square feet will be leased to another tenant, news director Jim Smilie noted that the newspaper throughout its history had always been located in the downtown Alexandria area and would remain at that preferred location. Beginning April 5,2017, The Town Talk will reduce its printed editions from seven to three days per week, hard copies will be delivered henceforth only on Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday

66.
Wausau Daily Herald
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The Wausau Daily Herald is a daily morning broadsheet printed in Wausau, Wisconsin. It is the newspaper in Wausau and is distributed throughout Marathon. The Daily Herald is owned by the Gannett Company, which owns ten other newspapers in Wisconsin, the newspaper also runs a website where people can pay to read the news. Official website Official mobile website Gannett subsidiary profile of the Wausau Daily Herald

Wausau Daily Herald
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Wausau Daily Herald

67.
Newsquest
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Newsquest Media Group Ltd. is the second largest publisher of regional and local newspapers in the United Kingdom with 205 brands across the UK, publishing online and in print. It reaches 28 million visitors a month online and 6.5 million readers a week in print, based in London, Newsquest employs a total of more than 5,500 people across the UK. It also has a specialist arm that publishes both commercial and business-to-business titles such as Insurance Times, The Strad, and Boxing News, the next year it floated on the London Stock Exchange realising a market capitalisation of £500 million. In 1998, Newsquest added the Sussex-based Contact-a-Car, the London Property Weekly titles, in 1999, The US Gannett media groups newly formed UK subsidiary paid £922 million for Newsquest and took on the company’s debt. The Competition Commission again inquired into this purchase but cleared it, in 2005, Newsquest’s Exchange Enterprises division paid £50. Newsquest also owned the formerly named Brentford, Chiswick and Isleworth Times, later known as the Hounslow and Brentford Times, Gannett had replied by saying, There is no truth in the report. Newsquest is a part of the Gannett company. It was hardly a picture of a company suffering from poor health, the company hoped to launch the gallery across the whole of the Newsquest network, the press release added. In April 2014, following CEO/Chairman Paul Davidsons retirement, Henry Faure Walker was appointed CEO at Newsquest. On 26 May 2015, Newsquest announced that it had acquired Romanes Media Group, the Romanes newspaper portfolio comprises one daily,19 weekly paid-fors and nine weekly frees, and associated websites, and the company employs 270 staff. On 28 April 2016, Newsquest announced that the latest comScore figures showed that users spend more time per month on Newsquest sites than any other regional press group, Newsquest has a digital audience of 28 million unique users including the Scottish jobs website s1jobs. com. Wishart had written to the commission in June 2007 to express his concern about standards, union members were holding a ballot over whether they should strike over five redundancies on the Glasgow Evening News, one of the papers bought from SMG. Newsquest’s Glasgow NUJ members went on again on 3 and 4 August 2007. She was not surprised staff had walked out and they have a long list of causes for dissatisfaction - redundancies, staffing shortages, poor working conditions and high stress levels. This is damaging the health of the workers and the health of the paper, rather than discuss the problems, Newsquest has derecognised the NUJ, Peattie continued. Peattie had tabled a motion in the Scottish Parliament expressing concerns about the Herald newspapers

68.
The Bolton News
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The Bolton News – formerly the Bolton Evening News – is a daily newspaper and news website covering the towns of Bolton and Bury in north-western England. Published each morning from Monday to Saturday and online every day, it is part of the Newsquest media group, the editor of The Bolton News is Ian Savage and the newspaper has an approximate circulation of 9,607. On 11 September 2006 the Bolton Evening News became The Bolton News and it considered several names, including Bolton Daily News and Bolton News. Newsquest bought these internet domain names in May 2006, the Bolton News head of content is Lynn Ashwell. The news editor is Maxine Wolstenholme and the editor is Neil Bonnar. The website, theboltonnews. co. uk, is overseen by multimedia editor Melanie Disley. It has 57,508 daily unique users, the Bolton Evening News was Britains first community evening halfpenny newspaper. The only other evening paper to publish before The Bolton Evening News was the Shipping Gazette in South Shields. The very first edition of The Bolton Evening News was founded by the Tillotson family and was published on Tuesday 19 March 1867 – with the front page entirely devoted to adverts. But the origins of the paper stretch way back to 1834 when John Tillotson was apprenticed to printer Robert Marsden Holden, Tillotson eventually married his bosss daughter and took over the business in 1850. His son, William Frederick Tillotson, became apprenticed to his father and he managed to persuade his father to help him launch the first Bolton Evening News, which stretched to four pages. William Frederick Tillotson married Mary Lever on 20 April 1870, severe difficulties dogged WF Tillotsons early enterprise but he persevered and the Evening News really took off under the first editor William Brimelow. Legend has it that the job application process then could be traumatic, Brimelow is said to have had a habit of throwing a book on the ground just as potential applicants entered the office to see what their reaction was. Tillotsons Fiction Bureau, founded by WF Tillotson in 1873, played an important role in publishing late Victorian, WF Tillotson died in 1889, leaving his widow and six children. In addition to the newspaper the Tillotson family also developed their general printing, Mary Tillotson, widow of WF Tillotson, was a business partner in the Bolton Evening News, John Lever Tillotson left the Bolton Evening News to join the board of Lever Brothers. From then on change happened rapidly, St Regis sold the group to Reed International in 1982 and the Bolton Evening News became the largest of its titles. In 1987 the paper relocated to Newspaper House in Churchgate and the old building in Mealhouse Lane became the Shipgates shopping centre, in September 2006 the paper was renamed The Bolton News. The rename came about as the paper is now delivered from the morning onwards, on 11 June 2009 the sub-editors in the editorial department were moved to Blackburn, working from the offices of the Lancashire Telegraph

The Bolton News
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(c) Newsquest

69.
The Herald (Glasgow)
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The Herald is a Scottish broadsheet newspaper founded in 1783. The Herald is the longest running newspaper in the world and is the eighth oldest daily paper in the world. The newspaper was founded by an Edinburgh-born printer called John Mennons in January 1783 as a publication called the Glasgow Advertiser. Mennons first edition had a scoop, news of the treaties of Versailles. War had ended with the American colonies, he revealed, the Herald, therefore, is as old as the United States of America, give or take an hour or two. The story was, however, only carried on the back page, Mennons, using the larger of two fonts available to him, put it in the space reserved for late news. In 1802, Mennons sold the newspaper to Benjamin Mathie and Dr James McNayr, former owner of the Glasgow Courier, along with the Mercury, was one of two papers Mennons had come to Glasgow to challenge. Mennons son Thomas retained an interest in the company, the new owners changed the name to The Herald and Advertiser and Commercial Chronicle in 1803. In 1805 the name changed again, time to The Glasgow Herald when Thomas Mennons severed his ties to the paper, from 1836 to 1964 The Herald was owned by George Outram & Co. becoming the first daily newspaper in Scotland in 1858. The company took its name from the editor of 19 years, George Outram. Outram was an early Scottish nationalist, a member of the National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights, any man calling himself a Scotsman should enrol in the National Association, said The Herald. In 1895, the moved to a building in Mitchell Street designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh. In 1980, the moved to offices in Albion Street in Glasgow into the former Scottish Daily Express building. It is now based at in a building in Renfield Street. One of the most traumatic episodes in the history of The Herald was the battle for control, millionaires Hugh Fraser and Roy Thomson, whose newspaper empire included The Heralds archrival, The Scotsman, fought for control of the title for 52 days. Sir Hugh Fraser was to win, the papers then editor James Holburn was a disapproving onlooker The Labour Party condemned the battle as big business at its worst. The newspaper changed its name to The Herald on 3 February 1992, dropping Glasgow from its title and that same year the title was bought by Caledonia Newspaper Publishing & Glasgow. In 1996 was purchased by Scottish Television, as of 2013 the newspaper along with its related publications, the Evening Times and Sunday Herald, were owned by the Newsquest media group

The Herald (Glasgow)
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The Herald building in Glasgow
The Herald (Glasgow)
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The Herald

70.
Lancashire Telegraph
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The Lancashire Telegraph, formerly the Lancashire Evening Telegraph, is a local tabloid newspaper distributed in East Lancashire, England. It has two separate geographic editions each day – one for the boroughs of Blackburn with Darwen, Hyndburn and Ribble Valley, and one for Burnley, Pendle, and Rossendale. There are around twenty towns in the area, including Blackburn, Burnley, Accrington, Darwen, Nelson, Clitheroe, Colne, and Rawtenstall. The editor is Kevin Young, who is also the editor of the weekly series, Citizen. The newspapers are owned by Newsquest, a division of the based in the United States. The newspaper was founded by Thomas Purvis Ritzema, a newspaper manager. The first copy appeared on the streets on 26 October 1886 and it was known then as the Northern Daily Telegraph and it was the first evening newspaper to be published in East Lancashire. In 1894, the office was moved to the corner site of Railway Road. From 7 September 1939, soon after the start of World War II, on 10 December 1956, it changed its title to the Northern Evening Telegraph and on 2 September 1963, the name changed again to Lancashire Evening Telegraph. The newspaper used full colour for the first time, on 11 November 1963, with spot colour introduced on 25 January 1965, in 1982, it moved to its present head office in the High Street, which marked the introduction of new computerised technology. In 1995, it became the first regional newspaper in Britain to put daily, in February 2006, in order to cut costs, the company announced it was to close its district offices in the Lancashire towns of Burnley, Accrington and Darwen. On 17 July 2006, the changed its name to the, Lancashire Telegraph, as it switched to overnight printing. It was North West, Newspaper of the Year in the How Do

Lancashire Telegraph
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Lancashire Telegraph

71.
Oxford Mail
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Oxford Mail is a daily tabloid newspaper in Oxford owned by Newsquest. It is published six days a week and it is a sister paper to the weekly tabloid The Oxford Times. The Oxford Mail was founded in 1928 as a successor to Jacksons Oxford Journal, from 1961 until 1979 its editor was Mark Barrington-Ward. At that time it was owned by the Westminster Press and was an evening newspaper, the Oxford Mail is now published in the morning. In the second half of 2008 its circulation fell to 23,402, by 2013 it had fallen to 16,569, in the period July to December 2015, the papers circulation fell again, to 11,173. In January to June 2016, a decline to 10,777 was recorded. In 2014, a page on the Oxford Mail website was removed from Google searches under the European Court of Justice right to be forgotten legislation

Oxford Mail
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Oxford Mail

72.
The National (Scotland)
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The National is a Scottish daily newspaper owned by Newsquest that began publication on 24 November 2014, and the first daily newspaper in Scotland to support Scottish independence. Initially published on weekdays, a Saturday edition was added in May 2015, the National is printed in tabloid format, and is also available via online subscription. Details of its launch were announced on 21 November, with information given at a Scottish National Party rally the following day. By January 2015, daily sales had fallen to below 20,000, the first front page carried a story about charities urging devolution of powers over welfare legislation to Scotland. Reception to the launch was mixed in both media and political circles. However, the Scottish journalist and broadcaster Lesley Riddoch was more positive, upon its launch, The National stated that it is a separate entity from the SNP. The National describes itself as the newspaper that supports an independent Scotland, details of the newspaper were revealed on 21 November 2014 after The Guardian obtained a copy of a letter being circulated to retailers by Newsquest announcing its forthcoming publication. Richard Walker, editor of the Sunday Herald, was announced as the new papers editor, copies would cost 50p, while an online version would also be available via subscription. The paper was launched with an initial print-run of 60,000, initial contributors included Sunday Herald journalists Jamie Maxwell and Peter Geoghegan, as well as freelance reporter Sarah Cooper. During the initial week of publication, Walker spoke of his belief that The National would continue beyond the trial period, following healthy sales in the first few days, Newsquest executives decided on 27 November to continue printing the newspaper, and to allocate it additional resources. On the same day, Neil Mackay, The Nationals news editor, publication then continued on weekdays until the introduction of a Saturday edition in May 2015. On 27 November 2014, Alex Salmond, the former First Minister of Scotland, on 27 January 2015, Newsquest area manager Tim Blott announced that the newspapers website would be relaunched in February, while Callum Baird would be appointed as assistant editor. The first Saturday edition of The National was published on 9 May to provide coverage of the results of the 2015 UK general election. Walker subsequently described the response as very strong and said that the newspaper would continue to be printed on a Saturday for as long as there’s a public demand for it. In September 2015 Walker announced his resignation from Newsquest, and consequently the Sunday Herald and The National and he was succeeded as editor by Callum Baird. As Scotland prepared to welcome its first batch of refugees from the Syrian Civil War an edition of the newspaper published on 17 November 2015 carried the headline Welcome to Scotland. The Independent reported that an image of the front page was subsequently shared multiple times among users of social media. The Press Gazette reported that 80,000 copies were produced on the third day, other sources, including The Guardian, and subsequently The National itself, put the online subscription figure at 11,000

The National (Scotland)
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First edition of The National, 24 November 2014

73.
The Press (York)
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The Press is the local daily paper for a substantial area of North and East Yorkshire, based on the city of York. It is printed by the Newsquest Ltd, a subsidiary of the Newsquest Media Group, in addition to York, principal towns covered by the paper include Selby, Tadcaster, Thirsk, Easingwold, Harrogate, Ryedale and the wider east coast. The Press often runs campaigns, such as the Guardian Angels appeal. York Press, stories from The Press Newsquest Ltd Newsquest Media Group

The Press (York)
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Type

74.
Southern Daily Echo
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The Southern Daily Echo, more commonly known as the Daily Echo or simply The Echo, is a regional tabloid newspaper based in Southampton, covering the county of Hampshire in the United Kingdom. The newspaper is owned by Newsquest, one of the largest publishers of newspapers in the country. The paper was first published in August 1888 and a website has been in existence since 1998, the printed newspaper is published from Monday to Saturday and there is one edition a day, down from six editions a day in 2006. The Echo was initially a daily newspaper before becoming an evening paper and it returned to being the Daily Echo again on 10 January 1994. The Echo is currently the only local newspaper covering the city of Southampton. The editorial position is that of a politically neutral publication, on Saturdays, the Daily Echo produced Sports Pink is also sold. This is used for the reporting of sport stories regularly involving local sports team Southampton Football Club and this is one of only two surviving local football papers which used to be common throughout the UK. Local sister publications include the Hampshire Chronicle, Basingstoke Gazette, Romsey Advertiser, the Southampton Advertiser was a free paper that was printed and had an online publication that was owned by the same company however it was not apart of the Daily Echo. The newspaper moved to its current main offices in the Redbridge area of Southampton in 1997, the former city centre offices of the Daily Echo are now the site of the Above Bar entrance to the WestQuay Shopping Centre, which opened in 2000. The Southern Daily Echo was named Newspaper of the Year 2009 and 2011, the newspapers website, dailyecho. co. uk, won Website of the Year at the 2012 EDF Energy South East and London Media Awards. The current editor is Ian Murray, who has edited the newspaper since 1998, Southern Daily Echo website Daily Echo on Twitter Daily Echo on Facebook Daily Echo on Google+

75.
South Wales Argus
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The South Wales Argus is a daily tabloid newspaper published in Newport, South Wales. The Argus is distributed in Newport and Monmouthshire, the paper was founded as the South Wales Argus and Monmouthshire Daily Leader on 30 May 1892. On 15 May 1896 the Monmouthshire Daily Leader part was dropped, the Argus has a circulation of around 13,000 and is owned by Newsquest, a subsidiary of Gannett. From its first publication until 7 March 2008 the paper was a paper printed in Newport. Since 10 March 2008 the paper has been a paper printed in Oxford or Worcester. Kevin Ward served as editor from 2012 to 2016, where he left to set up a PR company in Newport, Ward was replaced by his-then deputy, Nicole Garnon, as the new editor

South Wales Argus
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Headline from The South Wales Argus during the week of 2007-07-29

76.
Swindon Advertiser
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The Swindon Advertiser is a daily tabloid newspaper, published in Swindon. The newspaper was founded in 1854, and had a circulation in 2006 of 22,321 and it claims to have been the UKs first provincial penny-paper. It is owned by Newsquest, the UK subsidiary of U. S. -based Gannett Company, originally intended to be a weekly paper, His aim was to produce a newspaper that would act as a mouthpiece for the poor. Morris decided to print one issue a month due to the Stamp Tax laws at the time only applying to newspapers published every 28 days. It was originally printed as a broadsheet on 6 February 1854 and titled the Swindon Advertiser, Morris was sole writer, editor, printer and also delivered it personally, selling each copy for a penny. Using the inclusion of advertisements from local businesses, the second edition doubled in size, the paper became published weekly due to this change. In 1855 Morris could afford to move the publication to new premises in Victoria Road where it has remained, Morris funded the building of Newspaper House and added a printing shop to the rear. In the same year, the paper was printed using Steam Power for the first time, using a boiler and engine built in the Swindon Works of the Great Western Railway, they produced 5,000 copies a week. In 1870, it was renamed the Swindon Advertiser and Wiltshire, Berkshire and Gloucestershire Chronicle, William Morris died at the age of 65 in 1891 and the paper passed into the hands of his three sons, William, Samuel and Frank. Daily publishing began in 1898, with it being renamed the Evening Advertiser in 1926, the company also acquired the North Wiltshire Herald in 1922, now titled the Gazette and Herald. Due to paper shortages, the became a tabloid during the 1940s. With the advances in technology, the moved to desktop publishing methods in the 1980s. In July 2005, the changed its name back to the Swindon Advertiser. In 2006 the 2 editions per day were dropped and only one edition was printed. The paper went to print at 4am each morning and was generally on the shelves by 7am, in November 2008 the papers cover price was increased from 35p to 38p. It currently stands at 65p after being pushed up in price late 2010 to 42p, due to a petition raised and successfully imposed by Mathew Purvis the price will remain fixed at 65p for at least until 2016. This was raised on the basis that the key demographic for the paper was populated by those suffering from a dip in the economy, and was designed to create and raise a community morale. co. uk - Homepage